Goddamn I'm a Countryman Rec.   Jens :
If You've seen me lately, please tell me where I've been (S,2006)***°

When a hippie-in-heart realizes he likes his country but also wants to be a man of the world, expressive in the whole wild world, some years later he helped with the Goddamn I’m a Countryman Records, with some memory and cynicism to the name. Looking with respect to his roots and to his father, there’s a grief noticeable and a hard-to-explain-yourself-situation to an already very different generation and mentality. While the hippie learned himself to be open to the world and find communicative expressions leading to philosophical and creative thoughts, that can also change things for the benefit, for the countryman himself the land was enough. He was busy his whole life taking care of all variations of maintenance, expecting to see preferably the good things happening, not knowing what to do when things ever becomes different. Jen’s voice often shows a deep bass of grief when looking back and while going to the spirit-reality of things. I’m not sure if he expects communicating answers in return. The acoustic guitar spins, the electric guitar feels with him, the hand percussion puts the steps forward into it’s recognitions, while some flute and a bit of cello and harp creates more mood and atmosphere, and even lifts up the reality, with the help of a second female vocalist who adds harmonies and comfort with her voice. Touches of saz, organ and sitar make the expressions a more complete world, an expression of a real world that is liveable, has some beauty and above all knows the love, more than for things that can be maintained easily in its most recognisable form. The freedom of the new generations might be hard to understand for the disciplined smaller world of expressions of some of the forefathers, but on the other hand we must also understand they were also partly lucky to find more easily peace in several simple things, as things that also were not as much open so much to change all the time.

A deep personal document (sung in English) in a rather folkpsych flavoured style.

Other review on http://www.unimeri.com/PsychotropicZone/reviews...
Label : http://www.countrymanrecords.com/

Review of previous release on http://www.psychedelicfolk.com/swedenreview.html#anchor_43
Arthur MagazineV.A. : So much fire to roast human flesh (US,2006)***°

It was time for Josephine Foster to compile an album and to find artists for this Arthur Magazine related album. I read that “the idea is to counter slick propaganda efforts for the recruitment campaigns”. According to Arthur editor Jay Babcock "An eye-opening study issued this August by the Government Accountability Office reported that 'allegations and service-identified incidents of recruiter wrongdoing' increased almost 50 percent between 2004 and 2005. Criminal violations more than doubled over the same period of time. Increasingly common tactics used by the nation's 20,000 military recruiters range from lying about the financial benefits of service to threatening high school students with arrest if they back out of an enlistment process already underway. Military recruiters have also been assisting recruits in the falsification of documents to cover up conditions like autism, mental illness and serious drug problems that would bar them from service if reported." ( Just heard that just recently a law has been accepted that even with a criminal record you can join the army.

Mostly contributing, are invited participants who made themselves noticed in association in the growing number group of psychfolk and freakfolk related musicians. Most songs are kind of political protest songs, and meant as a warning not to let yourself be influenced by the recruting officers. Some of the tracks sound somewhat improvised and recorded privately on occasion. The first track, by Cherry Blossems, is such a funny garage-in-the-backyard recording of loose found-notes-on-found instruments with vocals heavily influenced by vast amounts of Chinese fastfood. The occasional last track by Lay All Over It, contains very acoustic rhythmic cleverness, with a jazz loop bass, and affected singing for the music sake, with lyrics based on a poem by Oba Maja, a former collaborator of Sun Ra, now street poet. Others really go for the protest song itself, often with an Americana influence, but free and distant from the genre association. Folk legend ? Michael Hurly sings such a primitive Americana protest song. Also Andrew Bar sings a direct, and very effective protest song (“don’t listen…”). Also the contribution by Angels of Light, by Michael Gira singing acoustically with an American accent, fits in that category, as well as John Allingham and Ann Tiley. The mostly psychfolk flavoured the Feathers community delivers an electric driven protest rock song. The only protest song that has a bit of an annoying atmosphere at times is the track by Charlie Nothing. Not only does he plays overly loose musicless guitar ramblings, some of his lyrics have brainless moments of inspiration, with an overuse of ugly and brainless words like “poop, piss, fuck” as if it can oppose less comprehensible political decisions, and as if a bland reaction without its own philosophy can stand up in power against it. However when he's saying “they’re rulers, not leaders” I think this is an interesting idea. Anyhow, this example gives an idea of an expression of someone who feels something is wrong in their heart but cannot express the details of why yet because the emotional reaction is stronger than the investigation, an inward view or any philosophy. It is acceptable as a representation of most people who can’t find the time to get themselves reorganised, and who only feel confused when hearing falsifications ; they don't know yet what to say because in general people were not urged or encouraged to develop too much the background information and philosophy that can lead to real changes, because the temporally rulers are still too much depending on keeping the things rolling as they are. They prefer not to take too many risks, a fundament which actually proves there still is more retaining power that logical fluidity of practical changes. Also listed from the psychfolk/freakfolk milieu stimulators are Matt Valentine and Erica Elders and of course Devendra Banhart with a demo song in his typical style. Last type of contributors are the beautiful female voices with some intuitive musical inspirations that benefit the atmosphere and some emotional character in their voices. Meg Baird (Espers) sings beautifully in a British folk tradition style (Anne Briggs,..). More girly voices with an odd flavour, -(Josephine Foster fits well, and of course is also listed, with a magical performance, as ever)-, are Coatgirl, and Rachel Mason, who on her turn fits well with the beautiful emotional singing of Diane Gluck. Another sweet voice with nice arrangements can be heard on the contribution from Kath Bloom (violin, acoustic guitar, voice). Also very beautiful is Kathleen Baird’s vocals and arrangement, a more peaceful alternative, and a wishful prayer for silence. The only track on the album that has less a slightly different stylistic association is the indie folk contribution by Pajo. In general I must say, it is a very enjoyable and well compiled release.

All profits will go to specific counter-military recruitment and pacifist organizations and programs who effectively advise high school students and other Americans at risk of being taken advantage of by the military's recruiters and omnipresent big-budget marketing campaigns.

Audio : Diane Cluck : "A Phoenix and Doves", Lay All Over It : "A Place", Feathers : "Dust" (or here), Devendra Banhart : "I Know Some Souls (demo)"(or here), Meg Baird : "Western Red Lily (Nunavut Diamond Dream)" (or here), r a bit more on http://www.myspace.com/somuchfiretoroasthumanflesh & http://www.apolloaudio.com/default2.asp?AIDL=86&site=AA or listen to all here

Info : http://downwithtyranny.blogspot.com/2006/09/so-much-fire-to-roast-human-flesh.html
& http://pitchforkmedia.com/page/news/2006/7/25
& http://www.100songsising.com/news.htm
& http://www.ab-cd.com/icbin/media/BAST009.html
"Label" info : http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/?p=1422
Review with 3 audio tracks : http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=23450
Other reviews : http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/?p=874
& http://www.volcanictongue.com/artist.php?art=Josephine+Foster
& http://www.metafilter.com/mefi/54453
privateMarissa Nadler : four track recordings, outtakes (US,2005)****°

First cdr release is a beautiful private collection of songs recorded in 2005. First four songs were recorded live (at PVHF ?) with Orion Rigel Domisse (a cellist player who worked and recorded before with Greg Weeks, Fern Knight,..), who played organ (“Famous Song” and on the mysterious 13th track version of “Flora Barone..”) and did some harmony vocals (on “Box of Cedar” and “Annabelle Lee”) during a part of Marissa’s European tour. Other tracks are privately recorded in California on a four track recorder.

Those who are able to, will recognise heart commissions to the soul in song, and the mystic level of literature looking down on passing by occasions. There’s a deep and dark melancholy performed with crystal shiny notes on floating water dewed to inspiration, visions, and reflections. There are several new songs. “Black hole Infinity” consists of dark ghosty infinite melancholic vocal harmonies, working like a intro. Also the instrumental, after “Chelsea Hotel #2”, “Ashes” has similar vocals as shimmering lights, and some beautiful pickings bringing you to paths of nature’s wrath, and beauty. “Days of the dead” sounds like a fragment of something freighting to realize…as well as “Strange” (a song that Patsy Cline sang). How many people like her could use simple love that has no boundaries and desires, but just is there to sooth tears. I also very much like the outtake “Lilly, Henry, and the willow trees”, a much darker version than I’ve heard before and also incredible as the outtake Marissa added with the compelling “thinking of you..” with additional cello and second voice.. Very deep as always.


Preview-cdr   Marissa Nadler : Bird on the water (US,2006)****°

Last demo contained actually some of her preparations for this new album. Some of the very strong new songs also to be found on the previous outtakes luckily made it to the new album, like the first track on this new album.  This track is of the same strength as her previously recorded songs, and in a similar style, with just a few touches of banjo-like strings. Even when I like this approach very much, the next song surprised me much, for its song and structure opens up a different style, also with the acoustic guitar, which is an additional level of performing. She also has no less than Greg Weeks as co-producer and some other contributors like Otto Hauser on drums and bowed cymbals, Jesse Sparhawk on harp, Orion Rigel Domisse on synthesizer and Helena Espval on cello. Like before, more songs are about death and departing, (a really always affected subject or not ?), but they are sung as if just everywhere there is beauty. There’s not too much to the arrangements, but when it’s added, I definitely recognize Greg Weeks splendid electric guitar style and approach, which makes the songs mostly pretty strong and gives some tracks a different, band-like solid basis. Very successful is also the Leonard Cohen song “Famous Blue Raincoat”, which succeeds well in making an equally dark version with feminine vocals, and a delicate and strong approach. Marissa has succeeded in delivering a strong, third album.

Will be released soon on Peacefrog Records.

Audio of outtakes : "Flora Barone, Queen Of The Vaudeville Throne", "Box Of Cedar", "Famous Song" (different versions from a sold out Australian Tour cdr, 2006)
21 minute Video of Marissa Nadler and a few words introducing the new album and live tracks : http://brainwashed.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5231&Itemid=61
Italian interview : http://www.ondarock.it/Nadler.html
Article : http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/onemusic/exposed/marissa528p01.shtml
Gig reviews : http://www.smh.com.au/news/gig-reviews/...
& http://www.benmighty.com/wordpress-2.0.2/wordpress/2006/04/21/...
& http://www.angeloplessas.com/blog/2006/05/marissa-nadler.html
& http://cucosblog.com/2006/marissa-nadler-at-the-social-w1-21st-may/
Live performance videos filmed by public : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9isApF3Y7w
& http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzRjgNAPqxs

* Orion's myspace page : http://www.myspace.com/orionrigeldommisse

Earlier albums I reviewed on http://singersong.homestead.com/folk2.html#anchor_45
Another upcoming album, "The Ivy and the clover" is reviewed on http://singersong.homestead.com/newsingers-13.html#anchor_576
Singers & Singer/Songwriters releases review page 20

Listed here: US : Marissa Nadler (2-3 x), Dilly Dilly, The Weird Weeds, Stephen Cohen (2 x),
V.A.: So much fire to roast human fleshSongs of Green Pheasant (2 x) ; D : Uphill Racer ;
UK : (The Sound of) Bailey , Viarosa ; S : Patrik Skantze, Amandine (2x), Jens
GO TO NEXT REVIEW PAGE ->

go back to singer/songwriters index
go back to general music index











this not the final cover, I only have taken a picture from Marissa's website to have some cover to present the album
North East Indie Rec.Dilly Dilly : akidleadivy -EP- (US,2006)**°'

Last year I saw Cerberous Shoal live and I remember each individual talent of this amazing rather experimental-progressive rock group. I also noticed what a great drummer bass player Erin Davidson was, even if she did not think it, she had a great feeling for rhythm with her own personality. Now and then she explores her own ideas. Her solo project is called Dilly Dilly. She reveals a very calm world expressed on the dilly-dilly-tumtum ukelele accompanying her songs, with just a little bit feedback on her voice and just a few vocal arrangements only, nothing more : simple and slightly rhythmically attention-swinging. There's a kind of warm recognisable attractiveness in this story-telling-pulsing-troubadour style. The ukelele style on "Ending Beginning" reveals a slightly experimental melodic, intuitive spontaneity. Each of the songs have a particular character which doesn't make it fit easily elsewhere except being some kind of world and expression its own. Just the last track, "Daisy a Day" comes nearer to some (American folk?) popular song and perhaps is a cover of some known song.

Erin also participates with Fence Kitchen, another solo project from a Cerberus Shoal member, and experimental group Tarpigh, also on the same label. (Review of Fence Kitchen on next page->)

Audio & homepage : http://www.myspace.com/cerberussiren
Label info (with more audio) : http://www.northeastindie.com/akidleadivy.htm
More photos from the same series : http://www.flickr.com/photos/...
See also another Cerberus Shoal solo release under the name of Asian Mae on next page->
Sounds Are ActiveThe Weird Weeds : Weird Feelings (US,2006)****

On their second release, The Weird Weeds further developed the part of attractive weirdness ; their first experiments were based on amplified guitar sounds, which is used here as well (together with other nice sounds), but here in an almost rock output, at times with heavy flashes of contrasts in colours, but ever delicately moving, and well structured. There’s an emotional strength in the well worked out song arrangements which are developed like musical theatre in music, with the percussion adding the right peaks and vallayss of attention. The evolution is like an open tuned story improvisation that is worked out in full detail. Recommended.

Audio :  "For You to See Me","One-eyed Cloud" (or here) & http://myspace.com/weirdweeds
Label info : http://soundsareactive.com/catalogue.php?album=saa1139
Other reviews : http://www.indieworkshop.com/music.php?id=2651 & http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/37527/Weird_Weeds_Weird_Feelings
& http://www.junkmedia.org/index.php?i=1822 &
& http://www.mundanesounds.com/2006/08/weird-weeds-weird-feelings.html
Homepage : http://weirdweeds.suchfun.net/

Previous 2004 release I reviewed on http://psychedelicfolk.homestead.com/acidfolkreview10.html#anchor_161

(The music not nesecarilly is singer-songwriter associated, but neither it fits perfect within my other webpages for review. It is song based interesting music).
PrivateStephen Cohen : Stephen Cohen & The Talk Talk Band (US,2004)***'

This is an interesting musical concept of stories that people, -musicians- wish to tell, with words, and with musical inspiration and interesting acoustic sound combinations, making a sphere of its own and with lots of fingerpicking muses. Most of the contributing musicians wished not to talk much, but let the music speak for themselves. Spoken, sung or not at all, in this case it doesn’t matter. Like the roadie movie “Paris-Texas” the guitar and the narrator count in for the story, and also here each detail counts. There's a certain melodic richness. Well done.

Audio Talk Talk Band release : "It's My Story"(or here),"Talk To Me", "Sliding", "A Few Passing Minutes", "After The War", "One Child Walking", "Katie Grace", "Excuse Me, President", "The Dusty Old Freight Train"
Other reviews of Talk Talk Band release : http://cdbaby.com/cd/stephencohen2
& http://www.rambles.net/cohen_talktalk04.html & http://www.americana-uk.com/...
& http://www.puremusic.com/60cohen.html


PrivateStephen Cohen : Here Comes the Band (US,2006)***'

With some experience in working with children, this latest conceptual work has child-friendly original songs. They sometimes sound rhythmically funny (with texts like “Hey Mr.Knickerbocker, nobbit-boo, I like the way you bobbity-boo”, in a happy-bluesy fashion), always clever. For this album, Stephen Cohen had very good musicians presented by animals -(What could have been a better sound engineer than an octopus ?)-. Some self-built instruments were used for the occasion too. These instruments, like rain instruments, nail instruments, thunder and storm instrument, are easy to make, an educational idea which is also provided in the booklet.
Another great album by this talented singer-songwriter. The style is influenced by blues and bluegrass and happy children songs. The album is not necessarily for children but reveals even more how children and adults can work on a creative level together. You can feel how Stephen has a son of his own, and knows, like a good father, what positive cooperation a positive relationship with children can bring.

Audio : "Give Me That Toy!", "Mr. Knickerbocker", "The Animal Faire", "The Elephant Walk", "There Goes the Band" and with info : http://cdbaby.com/cd/stephencohen3
Homepage : http://home.earthlink.net/~threehandstephen/


Review of Stephen's earlier project 'The Tree People' (1979) is published on http://psychedelicfolk.homestead.com/reissue2.html#anchor_112
Mimo Sound Rec.    Patrik Skantze and the Free Souls Society : Fiction at first view (S,2006)****°

While some of my reviews were done hurridle through lack of time and finding the right moment for it (beside the very old ones that were at first only meant as a vague additional reference and illustration for the radioshows and for further stimulation of research), I can still decide to prepare myself for such a second chance. Like with releases that finally get there when time is right (like with reissues) perhaps also some albums for review purposes are dealing with that nature as well, that not always all things fall together well. I know that people can get impatient when it takes longer than a month, but in fact the right moment to listen and to review is important as well. How many reviews are not written before the creativity behind the albums is fully understood ? Also, I focus mostly on the music, so I have the disadvantage I still can hardly get deep enough into the textual part.

I recognised this album from the start that this will become an important album for what I am sure will be generally appreciated by ‘70s prog collectors. All elements needed for this are present. There are many dynamic instrumental progressions, as well as crafted songs with strength, a beautiful voice which had its own production process in the recording, a general warm production with contrasts of 12-string guitar, with keyboards and other instruments that are arranged to texture the sound and the songs. In parts the emotionality in the singing is in between the best Neil Young and perhaps Al Stewart, and on the strongest moments with a similar strength like Bob Trimble. Also the drumming follows the emotionality in the singing perfectly. The longer tracks have also some analogue keyboards and some electric guitar improvisations. One of my favourites is “My Dreams Of Fate”, an incredibly beautiful sad & emotional song, this time also with additional female vocals by Eva Björkner, with an almost theatrical strength of true emotions (with keyboards, guitars and vocal harmonies). The instrumental after this, “The Plunge”, which is a bit harder, has some small but interesting percussive improvised section, besides various other themes on different guitars and keyboards, build up in a symphonic and a progressive rock way. The next two sections, first a song and then a instrumental also reveal interesting acoustic guitar passages.

Patrik Skantze : lead & backing vocals, electric & acoustic guitars, 12-string, bass, keyboards & piano, Christopher Korling : drums, congas, Eva Björkner : lead/backing vocals & flute.  Jörgen Palm
plays cello on two tracks.

PS. His previous album, "music for my egos sake" contained just 2 long tracks. A third album is under construction, with the same members and a new bass player Patrik Öhlin-Olsson.

Audio : http://www.mimosound.se/flash_mp3_player/04.Skantze/skantze.html
Swedish info : http://www.mimosound.se/publishing2/songwrithers.htm
& http://www.mimosound.se/artists/artists_skantze.htm
& http://www.mimosound.se/shop/buy_shop.html
Other reviews : http://www.metal-observer.com/articles.php?lid=1&sid=1&id=11596
& http://www.metal-invader.com/db/reviews-3539.html
& http://www.dprp.net/reviews/200655.php#skantze
& http://www.geocities.com/prognaut/reviews/patrik-skantze.html
& on http://www.unimeri.com/PsychotropicZone/
& third review on http://www.itsatrap.com/index.php?a=236
Dutch review : http://www.ratatoskonline.net/?axelref=news&id=697
German review : http://rocktimes.de/gesamt/s/patrik_skantze/fiction_at_first_view.html
Fat-Cat Rec.    Amandine : Waiting For The Light To Find Us -EP- (S,2006)***'

The slightly melancholic soft voice of Olof Gidlöf sing about inspirations and muzings from a morning after love and heart's affair, accompanied by a softrock band of drums, bass, guitars, female background touches, and bits of trumpet, harmonica, electric guitar and violin. The singer uses a rather similar vocal cry (technique) for each song, which in a small concept as on a cd works really fine, convincing and has an attractive moodyness. But I hope for a full release, the band or other elements will open up and work out more wider ranges of expressions. Very enjoyable.

Audio : "Wake", "Sparrow"
& 3 tracks on http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=23780
& 4 tracks with info from label on http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/release.php?id=201
& with review http://www.soulseduction.com/common/item_detail.php?ItemID=166527
& for different releases on http://www.myspace.com/amandinemusic
Homepage : http://www.amandinemusic.com/
Other reviews : http://whisperinandhollerin.com/reviews/review.asp?id=4139     next release ->
Fat-Cat Rec.    Songs of Green Pheasant : Aerial Days (US,2006)***

The first track, “Pink By White” shows already a warm production sound, a song which I prefer to list in the cradle rhythm category (-while some other music uses handclap rhythms, inside-the-head hanging rhythms, knee moving rhythms, feet-on-a-towel rhythms, and so on). The well contributing arrangements here are produced with a certain spatial dreaminess and a delicate pop catchy pleasantness, qualities which can be found anywhere on the album. On “Remembering and Forgetting” the dubbed echoes on the voice makes these additional voice echoes sound as if the singer gets an accompanying monks chorus. Other sparse arrangements add colourful delicate contrasts to the instrumental parts. All tracks are slightly differently arranged which gives the idea of songs like different sections of a concept, like the songs could be like different shops in a shopping centre of expressions. Also an interpretation of Beatles “Dear Prudence” is added. It shows the singer’s interest in the harmony vocal group which The Beatles were. The song is in a very catchy way dreamy danceable, uplifted to more recent independent pop production ways and ideas. Last track, “Brody Jacket” is a soft and moody simple dreamy outro instrumental, lead by amplified acoustic guitar, with layers of trumpet, bass, keyboard bells, as an improvised goodbye. 

Audio (with review) : http://www.soulseduction.com/...
Info on group : http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/artistInfo.php?id=99
and on release with audio : http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/release.php?id=209
Other reviews : http://www.monochrom.at/cracked/reviews/Rev%20songsofgreenpheasant2.htm
& http://noripcordblog.blogspot.com/2006/09/songs-of-green-pheasant-aerial-days.html
& http://angryape.com/artists/s/songs-of-green-pheasant


Fat-Cat Rec.    Songs of Green Pheasant : Gyllyng Street (US,2007)***'

This is basically Pop music with hummed slowly-pompompom rhythmic waters, laid down hug music with fashionable and warm-produced ambience-providing guitars, echoed guitars just like the productions on many of the early 4AD records (something which afterwards I read was done deliberately), and soft vocals. Although the mood is steady like hanging onto and wiggling in a hammock rhythm with a warm breeze, there is more variety in the arrangements than I would expect. With each eternity moment of one track one would almost forget there could be a next moment or song. “King Friday” has bits of flute and piano to it, “The Ballad of Century" reminds me of the kind of hug-lukewarmth of the quietest Nashville sound in retirement, “West Coast profiling” has a sadness like neo-folk, “Alex drifting alone” has a trumpet arrangement by Clive Scott, and “Dires P.G.R.” is sung by a female vocalist, Julie Cole. The title of the album, “Gyllyng Street” refers to a place in Cornwall, where people were calmy drifting away from life into a form of or wish for escapism, something which this music surely represents. The songs themselves hardly come forward out of this effect.

Audio : http://www.myspace.com/songsofgreenpheasant
& http://www.soulseduction.com/common/item_detail.php?ItemID=174148
& http://old.playlouder.com/downloads/release/~gyllyng-street-file-0/
Review with audio : http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=40441
& http://www.boomkat.com/artist.cfm?a=9752
Other reviews : http://www.musicomh.com/albums/songs-of-green-pheasant_0807.htm
& with audio : http://www.gigwise.com/contents.asp?contentid=35839
& http://www.drownedinsound.com/release/view/10756
& http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/...
& http://www.monochrom.at/cracked/reviews/Rev%20songsofgreenpheasant3.htm
& http://www.subba-cultcha.com/article_album.php?id=5704
& http://www.new-noise.net/album-reviews/songs-of-green-pheasant/gyllyng-street/songs-of-green-pheasant---gyllyng-street_2460.html
& http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/collective/A26176386
& http://opuszine.com/blog/entry/the_latest_from_songs_of_green_pheasant/
Label info with audio : http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/release.php?id=230
Info on artist : http://angryape.com/artists/s/songs-of-green-pheasant
Normoton    Uphill Racer : No need to laugh (D,2006)***°

I recognise Uphill Racer as one of those new intensively produced albums, with a wide range of sound volume, and full detailed arrangements in spatial layers, which often closely interact in sound as well as are chosen cleverly for their good combinations of sound colour. On “The Fat Grin of the enemy” it is as if the sound of Fender Rhodes is taken as a standard for the colours of musical space. Elsewhere, warm echoed vocals, and backing vocal arrangements also often lie nice and closely to other sound arrangements, like guitars and keyboard sounds, electric and acoustic piano, bits of mellotron, acoustic guitars, many on tape recorded sounds and fragments, delays, several well chosen tempo changes in the arrangements, bundles of acoustic sound percussion ideas, with smoothly pop-rocking rhythms, or hypermodern electronic and studio mixed percussion, and give a rounded dreamy effect with an equally degree of clarity. The perfectly and cleverly produced music speaks much for itself.

Audio : "The fat grin of the enemy","Polarbear","One Face Down"
& http://www.myspace.com/uphillracer
& with review : http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=23315
Homepage : http://www.uphillracer.de/ Label : http://www.normoton.de/
Other reviews : http://www.digitalisindustries.com/foxyd/review_detail.php?id=1773
& http://brainwashed.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5357&Itemid=99999999
& http://www.stylusmagazine.com/reviews/uphill-racer/no-need-to-laugh.htm
Dutch review : http://www.demorgen.be/muziek/recensies/index.html?id_article=NTkxOA==
Normoton      (The Sound of) Baily : The Way that things are done (UK,2006)***°

Immedialely I noticed the very nice sound of the guitar, of which is played in favour of the sounds which its rich body adds to the melody. Besides that also the singer has a pleasant warm voice. There are sparse arrangements added of glockenspiel, piano, melodica and mellotron, and an occasional second lalala vocalist. The songs use understandable gentle lyrics. They are sung with a distinguished level of dignity to its expressions. David Bailey's guitar playing compositions are almost classical, which help him to make that distinguished style into an art form, while the songs are rather directly communicative and expressive.

Audio : Song of the Lighthouse Keeper", "Made in Heaven", "School", "Could have been a sign",
"Left Unsaid", "Princess of the Sea", "Machine Man" & http://www.myspace.com/thesoundofbailey
Homepage : http://www.thesoundofbailey.co.uk & info : http://cdbaby.com/cd/soundofbailey
Label info : http://www.folkwit.biz/bailey.htm
Pronoia Rec.    Viarosa : Porous (UK,2005)****

Viarosa is a six-piece acoustic singer-songwriter driven band with the help of three extra musicians, led by Richard Neuberg, while the title track is ripped to the bone, with guitar and voice. It is an in rock embedded pain-in-the-bones-unrest that is sung about on “Where the killers run”, extracting rock and folk forms in its song expressions. “Call to the Arms” is a down in the country roots fled way-out-of-here song, with violin, banjo, bass drum, guitars, with a nice tiny bit of Americana folk flavour. On “Wake” Richard, with a bit more bass in voice, he sings like an old or experienced man, worn in the outside environment, and it is about things and feelings that are able to find homes and comforts. Electric guitars with a certain melancholy, increase the emotionality in the song, show also the desires of a more young man, hoping that such things all works out in the end, in reality. “Out of the edge of Napflion” is a beautiful instrumental with sound of crickets, and later, a hen, lap steel touches and amplified guitar which almost sound, at parts, a bit like electric piano, with banjo, and tiny bits of percussion. It is recorded as if outside a barn watching the sun goes down. In general this is a very good rock driven album with a factor of emotionality searching for grounds that bring the listener to a constructive experience, much more than most average Americana album that are founded more in the style itself. Never the less, the last track, “Whiskeyworld” expresses the same world with a tough pose in a bar fantasy, sung a bit more with a male country boy rawness in the voice, a more deliberate construction. A fine enjoyable album.

Audio : -
Homepage : http://www.viarosa.co.uk/
& with audio : http://www.myspace.com/viarosa & http://www.myspace.com/viarosacouk
Label : http://www.pronoia-records.com/...
Other reviews : http://www.whisperinandhollerin.com/reviews/review.asp?id=2106


Pronoia Rec.    Viarosa : Where the killers run (UK,2005)****

Uncut magazine described this as “The Birthday Party doing Johnny Cash” which gives some idea of what to expect. Americana UK described this as “Country Noir”. On this full release the lyrics are included. It gets me more into the global musical style game, influenced by an Americana landscape, with a personal story to tell, within that community, which is consciously a part of the interactive environment. The band, with a bit more use of the female backing vocals (by Emma), accompanies the songs to an emotional degree, with feelings like an urge to participate in life, while circumstances can make the game and story more difficult and wild. Well done.  

Audio : "Poor Man's Prayer", "Only Child"
Other reviews : http://www.musicomh.com/albums4/viarosa.htm
& http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/06/28/105716.php
& http://www.soundsxp.com/2114.shtml
& http://www.entertainment.inuk.com/music/reviewspromo2.html#anchor6236
& http://www.rock-city.co.uk/content/EEkpVZFEkpTwUcUgWj.shtml