The Temper Trap bring the Zooropa standard into their framework for a moment, while covering of a song, that unlike covering just any great song, has featured Bono’s voice. Kudos adaptation.
The Temper Trap (Facebook)
Rating 8.22
The Temper Trap bring the Zooropa standard into their framework for a moment, while covering of a song, that unlike covering just any great song, has featured Bono’s voice. Kudos adaptation.
The Temper Trap (Facebook)
Rating 8.22
UK newcomers Tired Arms have recently adapted this appropriately subtle version of “You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are” from Keaton Henson’s debut LP release, Dear…, which (worth noting) is easily one of our top albums of 2012 so far. Grab an exclusive download of the remix below and take notice of the tasteful workings of this fresh English production team on the up.
Keaton Henson (Facebook)
Rating 8.6
Contributed by Nathan Hetherington
“Father Look” is a delicately foreboding album track lifted from Sparrow and the Workshop’s 2011 release, Spitting Daggers. The video features the trio’s obliging parents in what appears to be the behavioural attributes of a mid life crisis. Given the lyrical content I say fair play, especially when set to this blend folk-rock topped with Jill O’Sullivan’s alluring and plangent vocals.
Sparrow and the Workshop (Facebook)
Rating 8
Fossil Collective put a heartfelt strum on the former UK chart topper from (near) decades back. “The Power of Love” has a timeless tune to it, the song seeps a pensive and poetic lyric which, at the very least, can make almost anybody contemplate the power of love. It’s beautiful. Check it out.
Fossil Collective (Facebook)
Rating 8.39278
By Bruce Rave
Schmidt is a 21 year old from Berlin who has been active in the London music scene. She was discovered by producer Guy Chambers who has worked with Kyle Minogue and Tina Turner. This track is really fun, as is her upcoming album. Imagine “Caberet” meets Feist.
Schmidt – Boom BoomSchmidt (Facebook)
Check out Bruce’s “Go Deep” show on Fridays 1-3 pm Pacific, 4-6 pm Eastern, 9-11pm GMT. Also listen to past shows at Bruce’s blog and follow Bruce on Twitter.
By Gareth O’Malley
I’m not sure why it is – maybe I sympathise, or even identify with it – but I find myself drawn to the kind of intimate devastation that lies at the heart of Keaton Henson’s debut. My favourite album of all time is The Antlers’s Hospice, and one of my favourite debut albums from the last three years is Learning by Perfume Genius. All three of the aforementioned records are difficult to listen to, but what sets Henson’s album apart is that, while the heart-wrenching sadness of Peter Silberman (The Antlers) and Mike Hadreas (Perfume Genius) was covered up by lo-fi production, before they moved on to other things – the follow-ups to both of those albums were markedly different – the production values of Keaton Henson’s Dear… mean that every word leaves the reclusive singer-songwriter’s lips is clearly audible.
Keaton Henson does no press, would rather that he didn’t have to play live, and was prepared to never let anyone else hear these songs, originally recorded in his bedroom. He didn’t get his way, and that’s worked out very well indeed. ‘Get distracted by my music, think of nothing else but art / I’ll write my loneliness in poems if I can just think how to start,’ he says on “Small Hands”; and in two lines, Henson has summed up the essence of his debut. It is an intensely personal record: 10 songs which consist a solitary guitar, a quavering, soft singing voice, heartbreaking honesty, and little else. Embellishments are few and far between, only ever employed – as on “Not That You’d Even Notice” – when they will exacerbate the effects of Henson’s music; otherwise, they are completely unnecessary.
Lead single “You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are” seems most reminiscent of Mike Hadreas’s work; melodically straightforward, yet focusing on guitar and instead of piano, and absolutely drenched in self-reflection: ‘Do you know your lip shakes when you’re mad? / And do you notice when you’re sad? You don’t like to be touched, let alone kissed.’ There are moments when Henson explicitly refers to himself, as he does on the upsetting “Flesh and Bone”, a song which, more than any other on Dear… is excruciating to listen to, as the singer paints a picture of a life – and a body – falling apart: ‘My body’s weak, feel my lungs giving up on me / I’m worried it might just be something my soul needs.’
I very much doubt there will be anyone out there who’s able to listen to Dear… without having some sort of emotional reaction. It’s so intense and reflective that one gets the sense that Henson is well within his rights not to play it live, or at least not tour it until he feels ready; the unsettling “Party Song”, written from the perspective of someone who’s just gone through a messy break-up but has been invited to a party by his ex, who now has a new lover, is harrowing stuff. If he doesn’t feel comfortable with singing lines like, ‘I’m afraid I’d kill your lover while your back was turned … I see pictures now, of the two of you, and it makes me sick,’ on a stage, that’s all fine. His reclusive nature, and the depths of his inner turmoil, are made easier to understand by his debut album – but he has also created a truly beautiful listening experience, and should be applauded for that. In more ways than one, Dear… is astonishingly brave.
Keaton Henson (Facebook)
Rating 8.75
By Bruce Rave
Have you been wondering whether Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros could follow the huge success of home? Here’s your answer, and it was posted on the band’s tumblr page. “That’s What’s Up” is an upbeat, country-tinged track that will make you feel…right at home. Knowing how Alex Ebert likes to keep things evolving, I bet the full-length will sound different than the last, but this song is cause for optimism.
Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros (Official)
Check out Bruce’s “Go Deep” show on Fridays 1-3 pm Pacific, 4-6 pm Eastern, 9-11pm GMT. Also listen to past shows at Bruce’s blog and follow Bruce on Twitter.
Nina Nesbitt has just released this self-shot (mostly) and self-directed video for the title track to her forthcoming debut studio EP, The Apple Tree. The 17 year old songstress out of Edinburgh has already performed for stadium sized crowds while on tour with the likes of Example, Ed Sheeran and Passenger (the latter two making cameos in the video), in preparation for the EP’s May 7th release. “The Apple Tree” leans heavily on the type of acoustic pop perfection that first caught the world’s attention on Nesbitt’s Live Take release from late last year. Take a peak at this Brit on the rise and at what’s to come below.
Nina Nesbitt (Facebook)
Rating 8.1
Marissa Nadler turns in this beautiful, spare version of “Washington Parks” by UK singer-songwriter Robert Manning for Mr. Manning’s “Music for MRI” project. Manning, who has MS, started the project as a way to raise money and awareness for the disease Multiple Sclerosis. You can read more about Robert Manning and this cause on his blog. What a gorgeous track.
Marissa Nadler (Facebook)
Rating 8.6
Ben Leftwich gives his own unique and quiescing treatment to the Gillian Welch classic, “Look at Miss Ohio”. His delivery is soothing as a summer night in the midwest heartland (something that Miss Welch surely also appreciates). Grab a free copy of Ben’s cover at his Soundcloud. Also be sure to catch Ben on tour in the Americas this spring along with The Jezabels. Full dates are here and this show is a don’t miss!
Benjamin Francis Leftwich (Facebook)
Rating 8.3
By Jon Herriot
This music comes from a solo project called Careful Hands out of Regina, Canada. Pertinent lyrics, smooth vocals, and great harmonica to accompany the guitar. I’ve seen Brennon play in some intimate living room settings, and it is even better. In a year when Bon Iver is getting some overdue recognition, this music has a real place in our hearts and our playlists. Careful Hands’ debut LP Become Another Person is due next month.
Careful Hands (Facebook)
Rating 8.2