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Showing posts from March, 2019

Deerstalker - The Eternal Facade of Complacency

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Deerstalker - The Eternal Facade of Complacency The chief strength of rock bands, since records were established, has always been their inclination towards the unrestrained. High flying guitar antics have long been the strategy of choice. So when hard rock three-piece Deerstalker opted to reign in their fury in favour of tighter riffs and a more directed force on their new release, they flipped the norm on its head. Problem is, it sounds so right. Their latest, The Eternal Facade of Complacency , is their first since February 2018’s Back To Sleep, and the progress is marked. While the same dizzying riffs remain, they are more compact and solid. The crashing percussion assault is still there, but it's tauter and inspires a thicker sense of dramatic gloom from the rockers. And while the creaking vocals bring to mind the post-grunge bands of the mid-2000s, their hardcore pedigree is maintained by its skulking malevolence. Conjuring images of a sea of headbangers, the s

Patrick Gardiner - Pieces Of Me

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Patrick Gardiner - Pieces Of Me Folk music is one of the nations oldest traditions, and the fact that it retains much of its prestige is a testament to the artists who are producing it. The inclination towards DIY has long been a calling card for the acoustic armed creative, but County Down native  Patrick Gardiner  has seen fit to take this ethos a step further. His latest album,  Pieces Of Me , was written, produced, and performed by Gardiner, and is influenced by both his home in Ireland (sampling  Malojian  in ‘ We Will Be Found ’ for instance) and his current residence in England (with imagery that oozes green fields and Victorian architecture). A self-proclaimed writer of “sad songs,” Pieces Of Me fully immerses itself in how darkly emotive folk music can be. In doing so, Gardiner begins to tap into his full potential as a composer. Already an accomplished producer in his own right, his songwriting and lyrical chops are graciously flexed throughout the album. From the mas

Dave - PSYCHODRAMA

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Dave - PSYCHODRAMA Your debut is your chance to make your mark early. After all, first impressions are essential in the age of streaming. Look at Arctic Monkeys, The 1975 and the countless other British artists that kickstarted their career off of an arrival that blew doors off hinges. And yet, to consider PSYCHODRAMA to be a debut seems to undersell its artist. Already somewhat of a household name after two massively successful EP’s, and with PSYCHODRAMA confidently battling the return of Foals and Dido for the number one spot on the charts, Dave (aka Santan Dave) looks poised to emerge into the spotlight.  A concept album revolving around a year of therapy, PSYCHODRAMA examines the intricate social realities of being black, British, working class and depressed. An emotional powerhouse, and one of the best hip hop albums to emerge from the UK in years, everything about this record seems calculated and compelling. From its unsubtle cover art (Dave, alone, set against a bla

Foals - Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 1

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Foals - Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 1 There is something about Foals that allows them to get away with things other acts don’t. An attractive arrogance that has endeared fans to their absolute unwillingness to be boxed in. They’ve rarely stayed the same, challenging their former albums with their latest, discontent to take handouts or compromise. They’ve never been afraid of mixing the hard with the soft. But everything is different now; they’re fifteen years older and a bassist removed from last they released an album. Surely this has chipped away at their mammoth confidence? Wrong. Rather it is the opposite, as the latest from the Oxford quartet sees them embrace a new lease on life. Taking aim at social dissonance, global warming and the prevalent absurdity of the 2010s, Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 1 is the first of two albums that sees Foals give themselves a leg up to new heights. With this being said, despite their gargantuan profile, Foals still

Son Of The Hound - You Are Alive

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Son Of The Hound - You Are Alive  Musician. Writer. Podcaster. Doggo. Friend (?) of Nathan O’Regan. Take your pick from any number of the titles used to describe Mick McCullagh, but for the purpose of this exercise, we’ll refer to him with his nom-de-plume: Son Of The Hound. The guitar pop troubadour with a penchant for soft, almost vulnerable, anthems returns with new track ‘You Are Alive,’ a strident alt-folk/rock number propelled by a determined spirit and resonant tone. An electric echo leads the march before a percussive stomp kicks the anti-nihilism into its wide-eyed gear. The upbeat chorus is introduced with a Janis Joplin-esque roar of “lonely, lonely, loh-oh-oh-oh-ohnely” before a wall of ringing chords, dripping in alacrity and zeal, slams into the listener. Streams of twilight infused licks flow through the track like tributaries, carrying extra pep with each flick of McCullagh's wrist, towards the grand sense of commonality found in the football chant appeal

Junk Drawer - Year Of The Sofa

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Junk Drawer - Year Of The Sofa  There are many words you can use to describe Junk Drawer. Traditional… would not be one of them. The Belfast based quartet have won the hearts and minds of many with their DIY ethos, genre fusion and John Osbourne-esque predilection for cynicism. Assimilating an assumedly unpalatable mix of Krautrock, Indie, Post Punk and Psychedelia, Junk Drawer are somewhat of a puzzle box. Charming, yet morose. Funny, but anxious. Aware, but in an excessive, bliss shattering way. Junk Drawer sounds like they’re playing a prank, and you’re in on the scheme. You’re privy to the inside jokes. You’re in the inner circle, and it’s a whirlwind of derisive one-liners and filthy, toothsome riffage. This spirit of glorious discomfort is the foundation upon which Year Of The Sofa was built, and it carries on Junk Drawers tradition of releasing guilty pleasure for rainy days. Superb stuff. Receiving the music video treatment (visuals by Ciara King, colouring by Matty

Rebekah Fitch - The Mac, 5th March 2019

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Rebekah Fitch - The Mac, 5th March 2019 They say that often the venue fits the performer, not the other way around. Tonight, I couldn’t agree with them more. The MAC is one of Belfast’s premier artistic hubs. It’s downstairs theatre, all high ceilings and ultraviolet haze, has seen some of the best talents in the city and beyond pass through its stage doors. And tonight its sold out stalls play home to the neo-soul and alternative pop of Rebekah Fitch, one of the brightest rising stars to emerge from the northern capital in a number of years. Accompanied tonight by a full band, I eagerly take my seat in preparation for, what is sure to be, a spectacle for the soul. First, however, an opening act. Derry songstress Reevah emerges from the shadows, her guitar slung low across her body. Silence grips the theatre. Reevah seems unbothered, tuning up her instrument before a smattering of embarrassed applause breaks out. The opening act receives this lull breakage with a gracious sm

Mob Wife - Captain Care A Lot + Hellsong

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Mob Wife - Captain Care A Lot + Hellsong It is often said (usually by people who have a cigar in one hand and litre of Strongbow in the other) that there are few endings, only new beginnings. As much can be said for punk collective Mob Wife. The conclusion of a number of solo projects led the trio of Chris Leckey, Carl Small and Mark McDaid together under the moniker of Mob Wife. Peddling a contemporary punk rock sound with aggression to match, I was in attendance for this debut show in Limelight 2. With their latest tracks, the double single release of Captain Care A Lot and Hellsong, its pleasant to see they kept the same energy from day one. Following the well-received buzz of Warm Water, the newest releases have Mob Wife sounding more comfortable than ever before. Their commitment to confidence has only aided the discovery of a more mature take on their already addictive sound, which shifts between unabashed fury and restrained malice. Captain Care A Lot leans on the

Seventh Heaven: Sarah McCreedy

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Seventh Heaven: Sarah McCreedy Back in 1977, NASA sent a probe into deep space laden with earthly goods. One such object was a golden record, containing some of the best music created by human beings: J.S. Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Chuck Berry. All in the hope that, should life exist beyond our spacial borders, anyone that came into contact with the probe would be prepared for homo-sapien culture.  But what if we got to choose which albums went into space?   Seventh Heaven is a feature in which musicians and influencers pick their seven favourite albums and send them out into the heavens in the hope of spreading peace and good vibes throughout the galaxy.  Writing for this edition of Seventh Heaven is Sarah McCreedy  #1 Sufjan Stevens I Carrie and Lowell  Stevens released Carrie and Lowell a few years after the death of his mother. I remember listening to the album for the first time, start to finish, and thinking: this always deserves to be listened to in its enti

Interview: Beans on Toast

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Interview: Beans on Toast It was 2005 when Jay McAllister took to the stage for the first time. Now, nearly fifteen years later, the man who came to be known as Beans on Toast has toured globally, played at every festival you've ever heard of (probably), released ten albums and seen the birth of his first child. Entertaining fans the world over with his social commentary, observational style and relatable charm, his latest foray into Ireland see dates in both Belfast and Dublin. Ahead of his performances, we sat down with the folk troubadour to discuss touring, his career, and his brew of choice. Congrats on your tenth album. You release one every year on the same day, your birthday. Why that particular date, is it a present to yourself? It's just something that happened. For my first album, I doubled up my album release as a birthday party, getting bums on seats more than anything else I fear. The next year I had another album ready to go around the same time, so