David Harfield

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Can pop get any weirder?! Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti tiptoes around the boundaries with ‘Before Today’.

Posted by davidharfield on August 23, 2010

Ariel Pink’s Haunted GraffitiBefore Today

Ah, the underground L.A. scene…visions of tattooed junkies, fading actresses and ex-starlets appear in one’s imagination at the very mention of the phrase, with all of these tragic characters living out their post-Less Than Zero fantasies/nightmares.  Well, if these disturbingly attractive dreams ever required a soundtrack, Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti’s ‘Before Today’ is a strong contender.

The brainchild of pop surrealist and all round musical weirdo Ariel Rosenburg, APHG’s new album sees Ariel stepping out of the bedroom where he has recorded his previous eight albums and into the studio, producing surprisingly polished results for someone who has forged a career out of overtly lo-fi meanderings, (on his earlier home-made recordings, Ariel would create squelching beats with various body parts in lieu of regular percussion.)

‘Round and Round’ has shades of Madonna’s ‘Borderline’ around the edges, with a chorus as catchy as anything you will hear on the radio, whilst ‘Beverly Kills’s’ marriage of Prince-esque falsettos and off-beat yodeling somehow creates a perfect anti-pop tune, with its irreverent chorus, “Can’t stop the press!”  Fans of APHG’s earlier work will appreciate the raw edge of ‘Butthouse Blondies’, which sounds as if the Pixies had suddenly discovered a vocoder and were toying around with it whilst recording ‘Debaser’.

For anyone who is unfamiliar with Ariel’s previous back catalogue, this is definitely his most accessible album, one to ease you into the general weirdness that dances around in Rosenburg’s head before he channels his angels and demons out on to his four-track, or in ‘Before Today’s’ case, a full studio.  It’s doubtful that APHG will be picked up by a major label any time soon, however it has to be said that Ariel has come a long way for someone who used to create drum sounds with his armpit.

To read the published article, click here.

To listen to Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, click here.

David Harfield

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It takes balls to start a band called The New Pornographers. It takes talent to make a career out of it.

Posted by davidharfield on July 13, 2010

The New PornographersTogether

On their fifth studio album, The New Pornographers’ bandleader A.C. Newman claims that he was trying to create music that was a cross between, “Led Zeppelin and The 5th Dimension.”  Now there’s an after-show party we’d all like to crash.  After we’d shooed the 5-piece harmonies from our ears and shaken the seafood out of various orifices, we might need to wind down with a set of songs that are both chilled out and hard rocking, at once stadium-sized and emotionally wrought…well, look no further than the latest album from the party curators themselves, ‘Together’!

A Belle and Sebastian for those that find the Scottish indie darlings slightly too twee for their tastes, The New Pornographers kick off their album with the string-heavy, ‘The Moves’, with its orchestral riffs slicing through the percussion section with devil-may-care tweaks and flourishes, sounding as Hendrix would have, had he swapped his Stratocaster for a cello, (try setting that on fire and escaping with your flares intact, Jimi…) The call and answer harmonies of the male and female vocals on ‘The Crash Years’ echoes the country songs of yesteryear, where Johnny and June Cash would trade vocals, each one supporting the other in melodic freefall.

Utilising an array of innovative instrumentation and anti-formulaic song structures, ‘Together’ somehow manages to tread the line of being instantly accessible whilst simultaneously enduring countless replays.  There are too many gems amongst this jewellery store case of an album to pick out a genuine favourite; however, ‘If You Can’t See My Mirrors’s lightweight bridge, “pissed up Sunday morning, we’ll miss you when go, go gently through the floor,” will plaster a smile on even the most hungover of grouches, a musical hair of the dog on God’s day of rest.

Littered with star studded, (at least in indie rock circles) guest slots, ‘Together’ reads like the address book Zach Braff wishes he had, with the Okkervil River’s illustrious frontman Will Sheff lending backing vocals to a few tracks, while Zach ‘Beirut’ Condon swings by to lend a tune or two.  It proves how well respected TNP are within their chosen industry that they can call on such talented names at the drop of a hat…let’s hope that they don’t spoil it all and soundtrack the next season of Scrubs.

David Harfield

To read the published article, click here.

To listen to the Blackchords, click here.

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Dan Mailer’s eponymous album finds him far too much in thrall to his hero…and no, it’s not Johnny Borrell.

Posted by davidharfield on July 2, 2010

Dan Mailer – Dan Mailer

Rakish fop, (in the Hugh Grant rather than the Oscar Wilde mould) and all round loud-mouth Johnny Borrell once claimed that Razorlight’s second album was better than Bob Dylan’s first album.  For all his headline-grabbing posturing, when the band’s eponymous sophomore album arrived on our shelves and turned out to be more of the same jingle-heavy indie that their debut had proffered, in no way launching Borrell as ‘a voice of his generation’, the much abashed front man stated that he didn’t claim to be better than Dylan, just that ‘Bob Dylan’ was poorly produced and that Dylan was, “making the chips” where as with his album ‘Razorlight’ he was, “drinking chanpagne”.  Fair enough.  While putting your ultra-produced and mega-polished super-album up against a handful of acoustic scratchings turned out by a kid barely out of problem skin may not seem the boldest move, yeah, it can safely be assumed that the majority of people would rather hum along to, “O oo oo, America,” rather than, ‘Man of Constant Sorrow’.  Congrats.

Anyway, the point here is that Dylan’s first album was merely his testing the waters of song craft, and, while there was the occasional flash of musical genius or a lyrical flourish, these were merely intended to pave the way for the greater things to come, loading the canon of songs that would inspire and shape the way songwriters would create their art for generations to come.  So, this brings us to the problem of Dan Mailer.

Mailer’s album consists of eleven tracks that pretty much play as one, a furiously-strummed acoustic guitar supported by an occasional harmonica lilt, with Mailer spitting out proclamations and protestations as deft and arcane as, “Your smile warms me up, like a good winter stew.”  I mean, really.  He could not be more in thrall to early 60s-era Dylan if he permed his hair and called himself Woody.  This begs the question, if you’re going to rip an artist off, why not pick the good records?!  Seriously, nick a Hammond organ riff, start every song with the crack of a snare drum, Christ, get off with Patti Smith but for God’s sake don’t turn out this acoustic drivel and think that through imitation you are in anyway flattering your idol!

There’s no doubt that some people will enjoy Mailer’s album, probably those who were always put off by Dylan’s nasal whine and would rather hear a more aurally soothing version of his early repertoire.  The songs are catchy, full of little anti-hooks and soft choruses that you can very easily find yourself tapping your foot to and as Mailer shows on the opening track’s musical interlude, boy, can he play harmonica.  However, for those who have grown up with Dylan in their life, who truly understand his importance in popular culture and the appreciate the difference that Robert Zimmerman has made to so many lives, it is doubtful that this pale silhouette of their hero will stand up to their musical standards; unfortunately, these are the people whom Mailer will be looking to impress the most.

David Harfield

For the published review, click here.

To listen to Daniel Mailer, click here.

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Who says fiddlers have to be sissies? The Seventeenth Century are out to show that violins are the new Stratocasters…

Posted by davidharfield on April 13, 2010

The Seventeenth CenturyNotes EP

Growing up in Glasgow can’t be easy for anyone, especially those harbouring ambitions to be a violin player in a contemporary folk-rock band…carrying your instrument of choice into school would be akin to wearing a mini-skirt to prison on your first day. Nonetheless, whatever obstacles and ritual playground beatings that he may have had to overcome, Mark Farmer has achieved his dream and now fronts his own band The Seventeenth Century, fiddle firmly in hand as he defiantly croons and bellows his gorgeous, if a little rustic, melodies over the baroque and roll provided the boys who didn’t used to tease him in class.

To aurally picture The Seventeenth Century’s sound, think Fleet Foxes at their most bucolic, or the Beach Boys, should they have swapped the surfboards and sunshine of California for the bracken and fog of the Scottish Moors. Their instruments entwine with each other as the bands’ voices build complex harmonies over poetic narratives, with well-placed pauses and inventive drum fills to grab and hold their audience’s attention. Lyrically, the band lean heavily on the sort of raw beauty and vivid imagery associated with fellow Scottish poet Burns, with lines like, “We rummaged through the roses in the park”, eliciting Proustian rushes of lost childhood days; one can bet that Rabbie would not have been adverse in sharing a wee dram or two with these up and coming bards.

‘Roses in the Park’ is the EP’s centre piece, a song that reaches out beyond your bedroom speakers and pulls you into the world that only truly poetic music can create, the Farmer’s hypnotic crooning enveloping and engulfing every single one of your senses until you are completely at the mercy of the climactic final chorus.

This is a mini-album of great strength, showing off huge potential in a band that are sure to be signed to a savvy record label at some point this year; over the course of a full-length the formula may begin to wear thin over an entire album and you may begin to feel as if you are stuck in a Glaswegian bar with an old navvy who will just not stop singing tales of his sea-faring days, with everyone just a little too polite, (or scared), to ask him to leave. However, the talent is clearly there, and with the right direction and the passion that burns so brightly in each of these young musicians, The Seventeenth Century are sure to make their name stand out in 2010.

To listen to The Seventeenth Century, click here.

For the published article, click here.

David Harfield

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Trendy as folk, The October Game certainly know how to go the long way round.

Posted by davidharfield on February 26, 2010

The October GameWildblood

It’s official, nu-folk has arrived. Yep, that’s right, Limp Bizkit and Linkin Park are now seen as dinosaurs of a forgotten era, with the new, (or nu-) kids on the block eschewing the screeching and sleeve tattoos of nu-metal for the banjos and baggy jumpers of folk. Like a steadily growing, extended family from the Appalachian mountains, the darlings of the folk scene have been interbreeding in each others bands for some time now and are no longer hovering on the fringes of society but taking the world by storm, or at least a mild cloud gathering.

The October Game are not quite folk, as their beefy bass lines and fuzzed-up licks would see them carefully ejected out of any Mumford and Sons afternoon tea party, yet they are not far off nu-folk, with ‘story-telling’ chord progressions supporting emotive lyrics, sung in colloquial accents that show no signs of becoming American-ized any time soon. After an atmospheric intro that borrows a little too heavily from Aerosmith’s ‘Don’t Want To Miss A Thing’, the first single ‘Greenbacks’ kicks in with some doubled up acoustic and reverb-heavy guitar action, before a syncopated vocal line delicately treads its way through the ambient noise beneath. There are echoes of early-era Elbow here, which shows that these boys have been doing their homework, although it would be wise for The October Game to remember that Elbow didn’t get any commercial recognition until a decade after they had formed, so perhaps a few more anthemic string sections and Garvey-esque ‘artiste’ stubble should be considered if they want to become Mercury-nominated contenders…

‘Concrete (When We Were Invincible)’s’ military tattoo adds more depth to the poppier elements of this delightful but ultimately forgetful ditty; heavier production could have brought something really interesting out of this number, a song that’s plaintive verse does not do justice to its ‘call to arms’ chorus and coda. ‘Boxing Underwater’ is both hypnotising and encapsulating with its stumbling, delayed instrumental effects, drums tinkering in the distance, with all the quiet majesty of its chorus delicately counterbalancing the stuttering of the instruments beneath it.

Singer Luke Williams’ Bedfordshire ‘born and bred’ accent does start to grate after a while, (not least in the 8 minute opus that is ‘Something Wrong’, a song that could easily be cut in half and have the same impact); however, the sparse arrangement of the songs with plenty of instrumental breaks and interludes provides pleasant respite from a voice that seems more used to questioning the price of ale than to crooning alt. rock melodies.

It’s certainly not a singles album, but more of a ‘grower’; with none of the ‘proper’ songs clocking in at under four minutes, it’s certainly a case of endurance over indulgence, a, “tracheotomy over a crossword”, to misquote Jeremy from Peep Show. Unfortunately, in relation to the current folk-rock revival’s landcape, The October Game are still sub-Midlake, (anyone else find it really annoying that a band of Americans are doing English music better than most English bands?); however, with a little more vocal innovation and a more liberal use of the edit button, The October Game could yet become a name to remember.

David Harfield

For the published review, click here.

To listen to The October Game, click here.

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Album Of The Decade: Full of pills, panache and promise, alt. country wünderkind burns up hard and bright

Posted by davidharfield on January 27, 2010

Ryan Adams Gold

Ah, ‘Album Of The Decade’…the temptation to raise one’s journalistic credibility through the roof is certainly a factor in making the decision, by going and choosing some obscure Fuck Buttons remix album, which is only available by marrying a Japanese industry insider and downloading it via an Apple Mac that runs entirely on your collective chi, or to be deliberately perverse and hail Axl Rose’s (long-overdue but not half bad) opus that was ‘Chinese Democracy’ as the Noughties’ greatest musical achievement, despite it being begun way back in the Nineties. This choice, however, will not win any ‘cool’ points, nor will it really be considered by anyone other than a few love lorn thirty-somethings as the right decision; oh well, you’re not holding the pen/MacBook.

The beginning of the new millennium was an exciting time in alternative music; there were a few soon-to-be big name bands making waves in the music industry, namely artsy thrift shop botherers The Strokes and their Limey counterparts, artsy crack house botherers The Libertines. Amongst this maelstrom of skinny jeans, big mouths and bigger egos, another name burned brighter than the rest, and that was Ryan Adams’ oft-confused monicker…(shout Summer of ’69 at your peril.) Fresh off the back of the critically acclaimed breakup album, ‘Heartbreaker’, his first solo album since his split with the alt. country darlings Whiskeytown, Adams planned an ambitious double album that was going to elevate him above the humdrum of the singer-songwriter world and into the upper echelons of rock greatness.

So, what makes ‘Gold’ the album of the decade? Could it be the delicate strains of Ethan Johns’ Hammond organ ‘anthemisizing’ the gutter-beat rap of the opening track ‘New York New York’? The ramshackle harmonica that clatters over the bar room brawl that is ‘Firecracker’? Having your heart broken into a million and one pieces at the first note of ‘When The Stars Go Blue’, then pieced back together bit by bit, all in the three and a half minutes it takes Adams’ to croon a song that, by rights, should be de rigueur as the first dance of any newlyweds?

Well, obviously it’s all these things and more, but what really makes ‘Gold’ the album of the decade is the fact that it held such potential for the young songsmith, showcasing a prodigious talent for melody, arrangement and lyricism that is so sorely missed in many of today’s artists. However, record label entanglements, YouTube-documented public spats with other musicians, not to mention a drug habit that could rival any Blue Peter presenter’s, prevented Adams from achieving the critical and commercial success that was within his grasp. As in any piece of fiction, and like so many of Adams’ songs, it’s the bittersweet memory of something that almost happened, a childhood crush that never blossomed, or a defeat snatched from the jaws of victory that really touches us to the bone; the best films are always the ones where the hero dies, as the best music is made by people who live their art through and through, and nobody suffers for theirs more than Adams.

The beauty of looking back at what could have been, is that it allows us the luxury of infinite possibility, the only boundaries being housed by our imagination. Would ‘Gold’ have the same impact for us now had Adams become the star that he always threatened to become, or has his tragic, self-destructive career been of such car-crash fascination to his fans that it only enhances his music? Perhaps the closest we’ll ever get to answering this is by studying the words and music that Adams offers us, such as prophetic album closer ‘Goodnight Hollywood Blvd’, “Run away baby, back to your lonely house, you wanted the honey, but you were only just stinging yourself, it’s hard to watch…” Hard to watch, indeed, but to listen to? Pure gold.

David Harfield

(Link to published article…)

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Ex Libras: Suite(s). Weird name. Weird recording methods. Great album.

Posted by davidharfield on December 8, 2009

Ex Libras

Suite(s)

TV has taught us that there are many uses for a garden shed. Whether it be utilised for marital infidelities with the pool boy, a la Desperate Housewives, growing illegal plants to sell in school, a la Hollyoaks, or just plain old tool storage, a la Ground Force. However, recording a math-rock opus has got to win the top marks for originality, with Hounslow trio Ex Libras having just released their debut album, ‘Suite(s)’, which was written and recorded in the most unlikely of home studios.

From the instrumental opener, ‘Issue’, one can hear these boys’ prodigious musical talent and gift for balancing innovative structures with engaging melodies; this leads into ‘Underachiever’, a homage to Radiohead’s ‘Kid A’ stylings, with off-sync drum loops, haunting falsettos and feedback galore. The fact that many of the songs are built around singular riffs and vocal lines is a testament to the album’s quality of production, with so many layers of sound enveloping the single-structured beats that it is impossible to get bored by their repetition.

The band are clearly a sum of their influences, with everyone from Mogwai to Prince getting a nod; in fact, on any post-rock fan’s iTunes playlist, Ex Libras will segue so neatly into Explosions In The Sky that you will be a few songs into ‘All Of A Sudden I Miss Everyone’ before you notice that the bands have changed. However, this is not necessarily a bad thing, as long as the artists that they aspire to emulate are of the highest quality and whose music has stood the test of time; it’s only when they start aping Foals that we have to worry.

So, if you are in the mood for epic intimacy, creative repetition and innovative referencing then get yourself a copy of ‘Suite(s)’ as soon as you can, but do them a favour and buy the album instead of illegally downloading it, otherwise they’ll be stacking their guitars and microphones next to rakes and pot plants for God knows how long…

David Harfield

(http://www.roomthirteen.com/cd_reviews/10593/Ex_Libras__Suite_s.html)

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Understated, unrecognised and completely unworried, Adrien Killens gives any young hopefuls a master-class in bedroom rock super stardom.

Posted by davidharfield on December 1, 2009

Adrian Killens

Selected Demos 2002-2009

There’s something to be said for shunning the limelight, especially in this media-drenched, Li-Lo adulating society that values celeb column inches over actual musical substance.  Well, it can certainly be assumed that Adrian Killens won’t be seen dangling from the arm of any Hollywood starlets in the near future, yet judging from his recent release of ‘Selected Demos – 2002-2009′, there’s nowhere he’d rather be less than in the glare of flashlights or in Heat magazine…no, he’d much rather be in his bedroom, writing songs of such impressive quality, all the camera-hogging songsmith poseurs that litter Heat magazine’s covers can only dream about.

‘Prettyish’ is a quaint opener, but quaint in a really good way, with a chugging acoustic guitar carrying Killens’ scratchy vocal throughout the whole song, a lisping Marc Bolan with Evan Dando’s tongue.  The actual song is a paean to social embarrassment and not wanting to be seen as ‘uncool’, something that the world and his prettyish wife will be able to relate to; however, in releasing this collection of raw, intimate and self-exposing songs, appearing uncool is something Killens is clearly not worried about at all, and is all the cooler for it.

Giving way to the garage rock slacker anthem ’22′, a song that could easily slot into Weezer’s back catalogue, ‘Selected Demos…’ takes the listener through a tribute to all of Killens’ favourite acts and artists, positing him to be a veritable jukebox of original takes on classic genres.  ‘Bored’ is pure Eels, circa-Beautiful Freak era; you almost expect a nonchalant voiceover from the big E man himself, describing everything that is wrong with youth culture in one continuous monotone.  With the fuzzed up spikiness of ‘It’s Only A Drink’, Killens then dabbles in shoegaze’, a DIY guitar tone lending the whole song an endearingly twee element as he desperately tries to justify him and his friends’ intoxicated antics.

‘Edinburgh’ is hilarious in all its potty-mouthed glory, as the song takes us through Killens’ blurry night out; searingly sarcastic, brashly decadent and wince-inducingly honest, ‘Edinburgh’ could not be more aptly titled.  Its travelling counterpart, ‘Amsterdam’, is quite possibly the most entertaining song about a prostitute since Roxeanne, with its hilariously confessional chorus, “I did something that I’ve never done before, I did some dirty Russian whore”; with English ambassadors like Killens, its a wonder why the tourist board haven’t confiscated his passport yet.

With the lack of proper production and the similar DIY musical style, one would expect the album to drag towards the end; however, this is not the case as the tunes continue to envelope you in their raw intimacy and honest humour, the home recordings simply adding to the sense of unity between Killens and his small, but loyal audience.

As Killens croons on the album’s penultimate track, ‘Maybe’, “Maybe, just maybe all my dreams will all come true, because my goals are so low, that all my dreams just have to come true.”  Ironically, if he aimed his sights higher, he may lose his talent for the perceptive understatement, so let’s be content with his bedroom musical meandering and hope that no one else discovers this hidden gem.

David Harfield

(http://www.roomthirteen.com/cd_reviews/10460/Adrian_Killens__Selected_Demos_20022009.html)


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The A.C.E. offer their listeners an experience that they’ve never had before…unless of course, you’ve heard any of their other records.

Posted by davidharfield on December 1, 2009

Alan Cohen Experience

Eat The Peace

Bands that offer themselves as any kind of ‘experience’ immediately come up against two major problems; firstly, to claim that you are going to give your audience an actual ‘experience’, as opposed to simply serenading them with music puts an enormous amount of pressure on you as a performer, and conjures up images and expectations of mystical, LSD-fuelled travels through time and space, harking back to the days when to go and see the Zep play, you would have to pack your passport, a teepee and a sacrificial offering to the Gods of rock in the form of a small child, goat or wrap of acid.  Secondly, you’re never gonna beat Jimi, the true Experience.

These fears cast aside, The Alan Cohen Experience have released a small album filled with songs that reference artists as wide ranging in their musical styles as Frank Zappa, Adam Green and Simon and Garfunkel; however, as is the case of many bands that choose to emulate such an eclectic group of idols, The A.C.E. never reaches anywhere close to the heights that they are striving for.

‘Rock Biter’ is a slice of tub-thumping rock from the Primal Scream songbook, yet does not have any of the soul that Bobby Gillespie channels into the ‘Rocks’, the Scream’s hit that Cohen is so clearly basing his plodding funk upon.  ‘Train God’ could probably pass as a Ben Folds Five B-side, but lacks the wit and sparkling sarcasm of Folds’ songs, although clocking in at under two minutes, it is hard to attach any true feeling to it, be it positive or negative.  The bluesy jaunt of ‘Ranger Stranger’ is fairly engaging and is quite fun to follow, it’s melodic, “woo ooh’s” lying just on the right side of twee; however, one decent song in a collection of six average ones is hardly enough for the listener to enjoy the entire experience.

So, The A.C.E. aren’t Hendrix, nor are their gigs likely to play host to anyone drug-charged orgies and their music is anything but extraordinary; in fact, there is little that is actually going for them at all…oh yeah, there’s always that great name.  Sorry, but it’s been a long day.

David Harfield

(http://www.roomthirteen.com/cgi-bin/cd_view.cgi?CDID=10339)


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Kid Harpoon’s ‘Once’ sees a talented songwriter come of age, and having a whale of a time doing it.

Posted by davidharfield on October 7, 2009

Kid Harpoon Once

For legendary Buggles-producer extraordinaire Trevor Horn to claim that your latest album contains songs that are, “so good that they they remind him why he initially got into the business,” this heavy-handed compliment could be deemed a burden of pressure for most artists.  Mind you, Horn is also producing Robbie Williams’ latest album ‘Reality Killed The Video Star, and if his water mark is anything like Williams’ last offering, the monumental flop ‘Rudebox’, then Kid Harpoon can afford to relax a little.

With the potential weight of expectations, it would seem that Kid Harpoon’s (aka. Tom Hull) batch of a dozen folkie tunes could only disappoint; joyous album opener ‘Stealing Cars’ does its best to counter this presumption, a catchy, up-tempo paean to the joys of lost youth and the reckless abandon that two young lovers can incite within each other.  In addition to his infectious melodies and inventive arrangements, Kid Harpoon’s USP is the truly heartfelt lyrics strewn amongst his songs, words and rhymes that tap into our subconscious and unite every listener in our common feelings about life, love and death.

With any artist who cuts themselves open to bleed all over their song writing pages, there are going to be moments of the insufferably twee, such as the nursery-level lyrics of ‘Colours’, “Red is the colour of the heart that I love you with, that I draw for you every time I see you,” yet these are far outweighed by instances such as the beautifully arcane middle-eight of ‘Buried Alive’, “We were sold a matchstick lie, and it’s burnt me alive, now it’s time to go back.”  Buried in the middle of the record, hides one of the album’s true gems, ‘Burnt Down House’, a soaring acoustic ballad with a sing-a-long melody disguising truly beautiful yet disturbing lyrics; this segues perfectly on to the deceptively upbeat ‘Flowers By The Shore’, a song who’s metaphorical lyrics warn of Kid’s plans to find his estranged lover, as he packs, “shotguns and rifles, I left my flowers by the shore.”

Catering for everybody’s indie-folk needs, ‘Once’ provides both heart-rendering ballads, and quirky foot stompers such as the gleefully exuberant ‘Marianna’, a song that could be played to any audience and still elicit the same smiling, toe-tapping response.  It is doubtful that the songs on the album would coax many other world-renowned producers away from looming retirement, yet as Horn said in a recent interview, “You soon discover that the things money brings aren’t important; people need to work.”

Well, it is doubtful that either Harpoon or Horn are counting on retiring on ‘Once’s’ album sales, what with the acoustic/indie/folk/rock genre being a fairly niche market, not known for its affluence, so perhaps another partnership could be on the cards for Kid’s next album?  Or perhaps a chance meeting of the three will lead to a Robbie-led supergroup?  Watch your back, Barlow…

David Harfield

(http://www.roomthirteen.com/cd_reviews/10334/Kid_Harpoon__Once.html)


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