CromsWords

1

Showing posts with label david bowie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label david bowie. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Incisive Live Music Reviews and Provocative Interviews

It’s been a minute since DaveCromwellWrites covered a live show (well, last November to be precise). While all too true that the recent focus has been predominantly on recorded works (not always the case as densely covered live event were a common occurrence on this site, not that long ago), this current feature celebrates a dazzling, multi-performance show.   Also included are two distinct interviews (something else that was once as staple here) along with some studio recording reviews as well.  It all adds up to yet-another thoughtful and detailed probe into this thing we call “rock music.”


When it was announced that Live Nation was putting on an “Eighties Goth Prom” at House Of Blues in Orlando Florida earlier this month on May 3, the opportunity to catch this event was there for the taking. Headlined by world renowned Depeche Mode tribute band Strangelove, the lineup also included The Cure tribute Lovesong, Not Nine Inch Nails tribute to NIN and The Electric Duke tribute to David Bowie. Having established a prior working relationship with the multi-skilled Julian Shah-Tayler via his solo work, the occasion to see him do his Bowie show and as an essential member of Stranglove was too good to miss. In addition to the performance, an interview was arranged with Julian and all the members of Strangelove. That full discussion follows below, along with a review of their recently released album “Rendition.”


Based out of Los Angeles, STRANGELOVE-The Depeche Mode Experience is a dazzling concert event. Bringing to life the very best DM songs, they draw from the artists 40 plus year career with accuracy and authenticity. Under the guidance of Brent Meyer (a/k/a “Counterfeit Martin”) his portrayal of DM mastermind Martin L. Gore on stage is a joy to behold. Frontman and vocalist Leo Luganskiy (a/k/a “Ultra-Dave”) is both a visual and vocal dead ringer for the charismatic Dave Gahan. Julian Shah-Tayler (a/k/a “Oscar Wilder”) is no stranger to this site, having reviewed a number of his albums here previously. James Evans (a/k/a "In The Fletch") is the bands Andy Fletcher in every similar way possible. Chris Olivas (a/k/a "Chris-tian O-gner") is the quintessential drummer every band would love to have.


The Golden Ticket

Necessary item for a smooth experience

Sitting down with the band an hour or so before they were to perform on this Saturday evening, the Q + A flowed in a professional yet-casual fun filled exchange.


DCW: Getting right to the heart of the matter, where do you see your place in this huge rock and roll music landscape?

Brent Meyer: The Question is do we have any back story beyond being a tribute band entity, because everyone views us in that light – in the context of coming to these shows. I started this project 18 years ago, and some people who’ve followed me from those early days only see me in this context are surprised to discover I do other things.

DCW: It’s the “onion” concept where there is more to an individual than just what you see on the surface.

Julian: And much more to make you cry (laughter all around).


DCW: Leo, what else do you do when not at this? Do you have a solo project?

Leo: Yes, I do my solo work and also a couple of side projects. Something I’ve been pursuing over a decade. Coming from a teenage dream to be the next alternative metal artist. Combining the elements of songwriting and being inspired by bands like Deftones, Korn and an archetypal teenage angst. Other influences are more sophisticated such as the Swedish progressive metal band Katatonia.  Focusing on a heavier writing style with the music, but the vocals are very song oriented. As an artist you kind of want it all. To be equally appealing to the common show business factors, but you want it to be beautiful to anybody. It doesn’t matter if it’s techno, synthpop, rock or metal, sometimes you get lucky and discover a band that makes you overlook anything you ever thought you might like. When I was growing up I was in to more electronic music, which is completely opposite to something that is post-punk or heavy music. Then I discovered the band Placebo and it changed how I think of any of that. It was so completely out-of-the-box and it was the right time to discover it. They’re all stylistically different but there is a mood that you feel. For me, it’s the mood and the atmosphere that the band is bringing that matters more than what style it is. So when you are creating something of your own, you end up taking bits and pieces from all of that, while still trying to be tasteful if you can.

 

DCW: It’s been well-documented that keyboardist Alan Wilder left Depeche Mode due to the lack of credit he was given for all the work he did in the band. Would you agree with that assessment?

Brent: Absolutely. He was basically uncredited at least as co-producer on every album he was involved in. The quintessential Mode albums that defined their sound for most fans. 

DCW: When I listen to his solo project Recoil, I hear so many of those distinct audio qualities.

Brent: The sound had all the Depeche Mode signatures, but it moved away from a pop sensibility, that melodic songwriting core, it was more about the atmospherics and sonic landscape. He chose to explore that, and who knows what Alan’s songwriting capabilities might have been in the band, given the chance.


DCW: James, your role as “Fletcher” in the band has playing keyboards and singing back-up vocals. Which do you feel more accomplished at.

James: I think I sing better than play keys. My vocals keep me going while I’m playing one handed Fletch lines. The ironic part was that he had more keyboards set up than any of the other guys, while playing fewer lines.

DCW: I saw Depeche Mode play Giants Stadium in New Jersey back in 1990 with the Jesus and March Chain as support. That was an incredible show, and I believe it was right when Martin started playing guitar with the band.

Brent: It was pretty much right then, that tour and the one before, the “Music For The Masses” one.

Leo: Arguably that might never have happened if “Black Celebration” and “Music For The Masses” didn’t lead up to what they did there. You can hear that stuff in songs like “Behind The Wheel.” If you reverse engineer some of their songs – their callbacks – and what they ended up doing in the future – the melody of “Pleasure Little Treasure” is basically “Personal Jesus” in a way. It’s re-conceptualized with an entirely different impact.

DCW: Do you think that’s intentional, or just a natural occurrence?

Leo: It’s both. Coming from their integrity and style and some of humor about it. Sometimes they’re really mopey and dark, and sometimes they’re really ironic. There’s beauty in that, and keeps you kind of wondering.




DCW: Have you ever met any of the DM band members? 

Brent: Yes, absolutely. Martin is a big supporter. 

DCW: He likes you? 

Brent: He’s spoken very favorably about us in press and print. In a fairly recent press junket in New York Dave was kind of ‘taking the piss’ about how much time he spent watching our videos online. 

Julian: Leo and I both worked indirectly with Ava, who is Martin’s daughter. 

Brent: I have as well.

DCW: That’s cool. I caught a show by Dave Gahan’s daughter Stella Rose way downtown in NYC a year or so back. 

Leo: I’ve seen some of her shows and met her briefly. 

Brent: We’ve seen her in tiny clubs. 

DCW:  And she knows what you do?

Leo:  She doesn’t exactly what I do, because it was more of an accidental meeting after one of her shows at Pianos. She’s more involved with her peers and the new generation of younger musicians that might not know about all the older stuff.

DCW: Some do, some don’t. I was always curious about what came before I was alive. There was a period of immersion into 1940’s and 50’s jazz, inspired by Kerouac’s “On The Road.”


Julian: Brent’s degree is Ethnomusicology. He’s the nerdy center of all this.

Brent: We’re both kind of the conservatory of things, with Julian and his Classical Music background.

Julian: We’ve occasionally done shows with a U2 band and they’ll bust out the Passengers song “Miss Sarajevo” and when Brent does the Pavarotti opera solo there is not a dry pair of knickers in the house!   (Much laughter all around).

DCW: At one time you were training to be an opera singer?

Brent: I never had any illusion that would be something I could make a living at, but I did want to pursue the training that afforded and follow the through line in terms of symphonic composition. It benefits in terms of arrangement, even though it’s all midi and electronics, it still all directly affects this. Alan Wilder, very much a classically trained musician himself, even stuck little sampled bits into the recordings. The chords that start “Never Let Me Down Again” references Carl Orff’s “Carmina Burana.” There’s also Wagner samples, there’s Mozart Requiem, there’s all kinds of little easter eggs that he’s placed there in Depeche’s music. In fact they had a b-side of him playing Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata” straight up on piano, and I think that’s pretty cool.  

                         Julian speaks to the audience

DCW: Let’s talk about your Strangelove recordings, specifically the “Rendition” album. Were you all in the same room when you recorded this?

Brent: Never! (laughter) Our original track and the Depeche songs were all done separately.  The only one’s that had any of us physically together were when Julian and I did a live stream of all Martin songs and a couple of those are on the album.


Julian: “Sublime” is the song that Leo and I wrote. I had sent him a couple of tracks and he came up with something fabulous, vocally.  We then threw it back and forth continuing to develop it, and then everyone put their parts on.

Chris:  That track wouldn’t have sounded as good if I hadn’t gotten my drums on it the way I wanted.

Leo:  That’s true. The ideas and construction were because of the combination between a very modern drum sound and a very live one.  That’s why in certain moments you notice we kept the drums “naked” – a dry and clean sound.

Chris: When I got the general track, there was no vocals on it. There was maybe only the verse part, and a few other tiny parts to it. I got the vibe though, and put down a John Bohnam-esque beat. A similar feel to what I play on DM’s “Useless” and “Never Let Me Down.” There was a point where I wish I would have added a little bit more later on and do things a little bit different, but overall it worked out well. Eventually they started to cut things up and Leo added his elements of new electronics stacked on top.


Leo:  Right. For instance some of Chris’ drum samples are more like a room sound, while others are from places that were bigger. You always want to go back and forth with the blending. Even back to the demos, where you like the original consistency, and combine that other sounds to make something truly unique. You don’t want it to sound like anybody else, and that’s what takes more time. When it clicks with everyone, is no longer distracting and it’s working, that’s when we say “yeah, this is us.”

Julian:  I have to give a lot of credit to Darwin Meiners who mixed what we sent him, which was a lot of stuff.

Brent:  A herculean task.

Julian:  He did such a good job with it and made it sound like we might even be in the same room together to record it.

Brent: Which was definitely not the case. He had to craft all that together.



DCW:  “Sublime” is positioned as the album’s tenth entry (with two remixes of it after that). The primary version is a guitar-centric, buzzy ambiance affair with forward drive drumming in support of Leo’s heightened vocals. The “thoughts of loving you/hating you” express universal relationship turmoil. “Let me in - I will disappear with out a trace - when i get what i want” becomes the emotional center. While “The pleasure and the pain - cuts me right out” suggests a release of personal ego, when experiencing the “sublime” of immersing yourself in the one you love.  Heavy, chugging guitar leads a bold sonic conclusion that includes soaring vocals and elevated percussive elements.

DCW:  Leo, do you write a lot of songs?

Leo:  I think it’s safe to say “yes.” It’s an ongoing process for all of us. I can’t really call myself a “musician” (at this point) because you kind of have to be more well-known, but definitely ideas are happening all the time. Ideas, concepts, side projects – until something really clicks with a lot of people – this is when you become an artist. This is where people start putting you in a category “oh he’s a rock artist or a goth artist.” I think of those labels as something like winning an award. You can’t really give it to yourself, it has to be assigned by other people.


Digging deeper into the bands "Rendition" album reveals a treasure trove of audio delights.  It opens with a wonderful re-interpretation of “Useless,” this time with emphasis on Brent’s sharp guitar figures coupled with Leo’s surprisingly fluid bass playing. The expressive lead vocals and precise harmonies from Brent and James are of course there. Julian’s keys and Chris’ drums also deliver at the exact levels the song calls for.

Ultra’s “Sister Of Night” leans on keyboards and electronic percussion to support Leo’s passionate vocals (with Brent and Julian background vox).  “In Your Room” is essentially a solo track from Julian Shah-Tayler.   He plays everything on it and does all the vocals. Having reviewed a number of his albums outside of this band already, the familiarity is not only in the song, but it’s overall production.   


Insight” comes from those “live lounge session” Brent referred to, and features his expressive vocals and Julian’s piano and backing vocals. The ability to bring this song to life in an intimate live setting is most impressive.  Fifth entry “Mercy In You” flips the script with a solo piano and vocal performance from Leo.  The “Songs of Faith and Devotion” entry becomes even more poignant in this stripped down form.   “A Question Of Lust” comes by way of Julian back in his studio, building a solo version of this classic with all the tools and talents at his disposal.


Dipping back into their “live lounge sessions” Brent and Julian serve up an electric piano and synth extravaganza with the recent (2023) DM song “Soul With Me.”  Brent’s powerful and expressive voice reflects the original’s beauty with resonance and reverence.  Moving over to earlier era DM, 1985’s “Shake the Disease” features all the bandmembers (minus drums) with a stripped down entry.   A near acapella version from all four vocalists, the minimal instrumental backing is all that seems necessary.


Final “rendition” is a solo vocal and piano entry of “I Am You” from Leo.  Subtitled “Audition Version,” and given the short 1 minute in overall length, one wonders if this was an actual submission to gain entry into the band. Regardless, it’s beautifully done.  The first “Sublime” remix comes by way of Julian Shah-Tayler’s recording studio laboratory.   Extended in length, all the instruments from the original are stripped away and replaced by an array of synths and electronic percussion.  Ambiance abounds with plenty of open spaces, allowing for Leo’s vocal track to stand out a bit more.  Final entry is the second “Sublime” remix – dubbed the “Entre Nous Remix.” Stripped once again of all previous instrument, new keyboards and percussion tracks provide a bed for Leo’s lead vocals and the remainder of the bands backing voices.  Both remixes are decidedly dance-floor ready.


Strangelove continues to tour throughout the summer and beyond.  Check their Official Site for all the dates.

Follow the band on their Social Media   -   Facebook   -   Instagram   -   TwitterX


*   *   *   *   *

In addition to the Strangelove interview, a second one was conducted on this night with no-stranger-to-this-site solo artist Julian Shah-Tayler, shortly after his opening performance as The Electric Duke Bowie Tribute show.  Numerous recorded works of his have already been reviewed here previously, and now the opportunity presented itself to interview the multi-faceted man in person.


DCW:  Watching you play piano in your videos (outside of this band) you are very accomplished. Did you have classical piano training?

Julian:  Yes, I was classically trained.

DCW:  Yes, you also mentioned in a recent video interview that you were also on a path to be a doctor. At the same time as this, were you also getting piano lessons?

Julian:  Strangely, my Grandmother was a music teacher, and she was very proud of my uncle who was a doctor. My mother is a lawyer, but she is also very musical. One year she won a Welsh music competition, and was very proud of that. So she would encourage me with music all the time. However, my family would have all liked me to be a doctor, but it just wasn’t my path.


DCW:  When did you first start playing piano?

Julian:  I was 5 years old.  I loved playing instruments and doing musical things, but I didn’t particularly enjoy practicing.

DCW:  Could you read the musical notation charts?

Julian:  Yes, of course I read music.

DCW:   At some point with the emergence with the 80’s synth sound and morphed over to playing these electronic keyboards?

Julian:  I’m a little younger than that, so I didn’t really get into synthesizers until I joined this band here, Strangelove.  Everything I did up till then was about recording studio work. Brent was previously describing how Alan Wilder would take pieces of orchestral works and include them. I did that as well, without any prior knowledge of what he was doing. I would take Beethoven or Stravinsky or Benjamin Britten and I would stretch my selections to make an orchestral sound for the stuff I did. I didn’t have any synths, only pianos so I would improvise in other ways. Like I would take the sound of a squeaking door, sample it and use that as a sort of keyboard sound.


DCW:  At one time were you on a path to be a classical piano player?

Julian: I would have never been a classical concert pianist. I was, I wouldn’t say mediocre – I was good but not great. When you listen to Lang Lang you hear how spectacular and brilliant they are. I was always interested more in composing, and if you want to do that, you don’t become a classical pianist.

DCW: Early on you had the songwriter bug?

Julian: Yes. I wrote my first piano piece when I was nine years old, and my first song when I was 14. I needed to be self-expressive, that was very important to me.

DCW: When did you first make the move to the United States?

Julian: I came over with a band named Whitey, who I co-wrote a lot of stuff with. We had songs in “The Sopranos,” “Breaking Bad” and we did very well. We went on a tour with Peaches that was really good. So, that’s how I ended up in the USA.


DCW: You originally grew up in Leeds, UK?

Julian: I was born in Leeds, but didn’t grow up there. I went to boarding school in Durham, which was the basis for Hogwarts in the Harry Potter world. I then went to University in York and later moved to London when I was old enough to do the whole thing with music.

DCW: You’ve been a solo artist from your earliest days, but you also do these other projects.

Julian: I like collaborating with people, and especially with very talented writers. If something like Whitey comes along, it helps me learn. The same thing with Leo here in this band. Another I’ve worked with is Tiki Lewis who has really spectacular stuff. If I find people I like working with, that is a welcome diversion. However, it will never be my focus beyond what I do – it will be just another thing.


DCW:  It sounds to me like you’ve gotten a number of songs in films, television shows and/or video games.  Is that something you put out there to be found, or do you have people contacting you for specific projects?

Julian:  Both – all of those things. Currently I’m working on a tv script based around my music. It’s my story, and is a written 13 episode arc.  The pilot is fully written, and the next 12 episodes have synopses.


DCW:  Do you have the people in place – the contacts, to bring this to life?

Julian:  I had all that before the global shutdown of 2020.   A couple of production companies were interested in making it.  I currently have one production company who is now interested and I’m collaborating with over the next couple of months to bring it to fruition.  We will make it happen because I’m fairly confident the person I’m working with has the means to do it.


It was truly a pleasure to finally meet Julian in person, as well as all the other wonderful musicians working on this night.

With Julian on left and Leo on right

The most recent piece of writing on Julian Shah-Tayler (a/k/a The Singularity) can be found Here (along with links to all previous features this site has done on him, within).

*   *   *   *   *

Also performing on this night was an amazingly accurate The Cure Tribute show by the mesmerizing band Lovesong.


This show was the closest thing to attending a Cure live show, without it being the actual band! Frontman Rusty has got his Robert Smith down in not only sound, but all the physical movements diehard Cure fans have come to know over decades.  In fact, the whole band is a precise, well-honed machine that reproduced every song brilliantly.


Even before details were hashed out with contacts in Depeche Mode Tribute Strangelove, a spot at this event was secured via Lovesong’s “win a ticket to the show” contest running on social media leading up to the event.


-     -     -


Even though ultimately not needed, the gesture was most certainly appreciated (and told them so in a brief chat after the show).

The unanimous consent among anyone who has experienced their show is they are the premier Cure live show out there (other than the actual Robert Smith and company).

Listen to this clip of "Just Like Heaven"


Who doesn't love the achingly beautiful "Pictures Of You"


Or the sheer uplifting joy of "Inbetween Days"


Perhaps it's time to go for "The Walk"


Or get lost in "A Forest"


Nothing captures the balance of doomy wonder than the instrumental passages of "Fascination Street"



I'm glad I got to see "The Cure" this year!


Lovesong continues their tour throughout the upcoming days as well.


Find out more about this and everything else with the band via their Official Website   -  Linktree   -   Facebook   -   Instagram

*   *   *   *   *

One more band performing at this show was Not Nine Inch Nails who blasted everyone in the face with their NIN Tribute Show.


Ripping through a set of NIN classics, the view from down in the heart of the audience was the place to be.

Check out their version of "Wish"


and "Terrible Lie" here


A show worth checking out if you get the chance!

Follow NNIN on their Social Media   -   Official Website   -   Facebook   -   Instagram

Also check out this sites review of the actual Nine Inch Nails here.

*   *   *   *   *   *

Friday, June 28, 2024

Cerebral Inquiries Into New Full Album Releases

Full-length Album Reviews are the DaveCromwellWrites focus this go round, as the Summer has now officially begun. Extensive track-by-track analysis is delivered on new releases from artists whose earlier work have been previously featured here on this site. Glam-fronted punky pop rockers share space with a brilliant recreation/tribute to one of the original glam-rocker’s finest works. Rounding out the feature is a new full album release from creative alternative pop rockers.


It’s been far too long since DCW had the opportunity to review new music from enduring Queens, NY rockers GIFTSHOP.  Fortunately that wait is over as the band has just released their latest 9 track album “A Bunch Of Singles.”  Comprised of some previously released (and reviewed here) singles, five new entries complete the collection, giving us a broader spectrum of rock to dig into. Additionally, a music video accompanies the song that represents their hometown neighborhood and the people who inhabit it.


An unexpected piano-driven power ballad is the first new (to this site) song “There’s You.” With slow moving open arpeggio piano chords and rim-clack percussion, Meghan Taylor’s intimate vocals express a longing nature in lyrics shared. “Oh, so lonely - and oh, it shows - and though I'm broken -you know, no one knows.” Out of this sadness, an uplifting moment arrives with the beautifully harmonized, simple four word chorus “and then, there’s you.” Distinctive guitar figures are placed at just the right moments here, adding necessary accents. The second verse has the piano dropping out, leaving a low bass hum as an even more personal sonic field for Meghan’s heartfelt delivery.  Fuller drums kick in behind the subsequent chorus, which adds a pivotal change “and then, it’s true.”


A re-visitation of early era favorite “Spooky Halloween Christmas” adds a “Too” now, while injecting Ska/Rockabilly horns into this macabre delight. Meghan’s vocals are less Debbie Harry (as on the original) and more her own, with fuller emphatic delivery.  The walking bassline is still dominant, while appropriate sleigh-bells accompany monster-mash “ghoulish ride” aside voices. The accents are crisp and tight with the head-bopping, catchy chorus “It's Hallows' Eve with Christmas Trees! Skulls are hanging from the evergreens.”


Built on a deep, chugging, stoner-rock groove, “The Breakthrough” contemplates on the things you’ve needed to do in becoming the person you now are. Giftshop never wastes anyone’s time in getting to the hook, however and it’s a singalong beauty with the lyrics “nothing can stop us now – Are you with me?” Lyrical insight and introspection point out how “glittering gold” is “too good to be true,” and “the journey of lies turned into the truth.” A mid-point breakdown shifts the rhythm while providing a bit of uplift and hope after all the “compromises.” Delivered in call-and-response fashion, “you make a living by when you get” is followed by “you make a life by what you give.” The addition of a rising slide-guitar here provides musical gravity to this ultimate realization “breakthrough.”  Repeated vocal “wow” at the end drive home this necessary point.



Arriving with a cameo-filled video of local friends and followers, the already live show favorite sing-along “Astoria” delivers on it’s promise. Opening the footage with quick shots of their favorite hometown places, the bass guitar driven intro meets buzzing-bee axe for the musical throwdown. With copious amounts of live show footage from local favorite bar “Dominie’s” 2023 annual celebration event, the camera follows glamorous lead vocalist Meghan into the venue. The essential riff is sharp and precise, with drums and guitar accenting the changes. Long time fans are visible in front of the band as much of the footage is shot from behind. Quick cuts of the band members are of course necessary and included, as views from both inside and out of the space dance across the screen. Lyrically the song is as instantly classic as “New York, New York” or “I Love LA.” This time, however it is a love tome to a prominent NYC borough. “Drop me off at the Broadway stop NO! Not in Manhattan - This is my happy place - Join the Queens bandwagon.” The brilliant simplicity of the songs single title word chorus is all you need for fist pumping fans to leap on that bandwagon in that joyous moment of camaraderie.

Check out this wonderful video here:


The band also includes a cover of the groundbreaking classic 90’s Radiohead song “Creep.” While the band charges through it’s progression with thunderous glee, Meghan let’s loose with a powerful voice that hits every note. And who hasn’t at some point in their lives related to the lyrics “what the hell am I doing here? I don't belong here." Tacked on the end is a 41 second punk rock short that joyously concludes with the chanted lines “loaded diaper.”

Earlier released singles from this album are reviewed here: “More Than That” / “Kewl With Me” and “Stylish Junkie

Check out the full album on their Bandcamp (including how to acquire it).

Previous Reviews Featuring Giftshop can be found on this site here, here, here and here.

Follow GIFTSHOP on their Social Media: Official Website - Facebook - Instagram

*  *  *  *  *

Julian Shah-Tayler is one of those multi-disciplinary musicians who appear to be always busy. In addition to writing, recording and touring his own music as The Singularity, he still finds the time to play live shows as a key member of very popular Depeche Mode tribute band Strangelove. Not content with all of that, he also does an impressive David Bowie show, encompassing the thin white duke’s beloved catalog. In that regard he has released a “50th Anniversary of Diamond Dogs full cover album.” DCW digs down now into this ambitious project, listening for a new interpretation of a treasured classic.


Putting his immediate unique personal stamp on opening track “Future Legend,” bold synthesizers provide an ominous background for the spoken word apocalyptic vision. Julian’s proper English accent and voice is deeper than Bowie’s reedier tone, and today’s modern production qualities add a richness that the DB self-produced original couldn’t accomplish in 1974. The lyrics still strike hard as when first heard by this writer back then: “Fleas the size of rats sucked on rats the size of cats And ten thousand peoploids split into small tribes.” A dystopian world is all that’s left, and will end “any day now."

One more spoken word phrase sets up the title track, as Julian delivers the pivotal line “This ain't Rock'n'Roll - This is – Genocide!” Having performed, produced, mixed and mastered everything by himself, Julian stays true to the originals chunky guitar riffing and cowbell percussion. Lifting his voice back up into more familiar Bowie register (the steady #bowietribute shows he does surely solidifies and hones this skill) the initially (and still) amusing lyrics “As they pulled you out of the oxygen tent - You asked for the latest party.” The younger, more reckless version of myself could almost relate to this. The next line “with your silicone hump and your ten inch stump,” however was far more of a head-scratcher. Other catch phrases like “mannequins with kill appeal” always stuck and are delivered here by Julian with aplomb. The chugging Rolling Stone-like chorus turns the mood a bit more rock and roll party, singing “come out of the garden, baby - you'll catch your death in the fog. Young girl, they call them the Diamond Dogs.” Julian adds new touches to certain lines, like the “Halloween Jack” verse where sonic echoes enhance the lyrics “so he slides down a rope.” Special mention to the bass playing here, which playfully adds wonderful counter rhythms.


 

Julian drops his voice down into a lower register for the introductory sequence on the piano-driven 8 minute opus “Sweet Thing.” That quickly shifts to the more Bowie-esque tenor on the line “and isn't it me, putting pain in a stranger?” before going full also on "Boys, Boys, its a sweet thing.” This vocal flex shows Julian’s ability to reinterpret the original croon while simultaneously putting his own stamp on it. Thematically depicting sex-for-sale as transactional commodity, it gets woven into “hope” being a “cheap thing.” Wonderful buzzy guitar lines ride over top of the primary piano chords, leading into the “Candidate” midsection. Notable high harmonies grace the lines “some make you sing and some make you scream - one makes you wish that you'd never been seen” while making pop culture references to Charlie Manson and Cassius Clay. Rattle tambourine quickens the pace behind desperation lines “Anyone out there? Any time?" and “When it's good, it's really good, and when it's bad I go to pieces." The resigned nihilistic partners agree to “buy some drugs and watch a band - then jump in the river holding hands.” Julian masterfully handles the “Reprise” section, going full falsetto on final powerful lines “then let it be, it's all I ever wanted. It's a street with a deal, and a taste. It's got claws, it's got me, it's got youuuuu.”

Not content to simply re-hash Bowie's most covered track, Julian turns the signature opening riff of "Rebel Rebel" on it’s head with a bass and drums intro, followed by keyboards in place of that recognizable hook. It’s as if Alan Wilder-era Depeche Mode is responsible for this delightful 80-90’s (decades after the original) recreation. Not to sit on one musical statement too long, buzzy guitar does make it’s appearance in that riff spot on the second pass through. The pure joy of these rock and roll lyrics still remain with us all, so many years later. “You like me, and I like it all - We like dancing and we look divine - You love bands when they're playing hard - You want more and you want it fast.” Additional musical interludes like the extended “bongo” production on the “Don’t ya?” segment is curiously inventive.


Julian returns to his dead-on Bowie croon for the Geoff MacCormack co-written power ballad “Rock and Roll With Me.” Noteworthy as being Bowie's first co-writing credit on one of his own albums, the song made the album having been salvaged from a planned but never-completed “Ziggy Stardust musical.” Julian gives it a proper rock and roll treatment, building it around guitars, bass and drums. Memorable lyrics from those formative and impressionable days like “lizards lay crying in the heat” and “I would take a foxy kind of stand - While tens of thousands found me in demand” are still a delight from this 50 years after perspective.


Electric piano serves as the primary musical force behind the William Burroughs/George Orwell inspired “We Are The Dead.” Believed to have been lyrically constructed via Burroughs's famous "cut-up" technique, Julian puts his all in the vocals during big production sections. Still enamored by the line “but I love you in your fuck-me pumps” (stylish teenage lust is hard to shake, even at this advanced age) it’s still a grim resolution “Because of all we've seen, because of all we've said - We are the dead.


There’s a subtle trap-hop element to the percussion on Julian’s adaptation of the Orwell inspired “1984.” While acoustic tone guitars initially move around the edges, an unexpected fiddle-sound saws away through center. Funk-guitar is introduced on the second verse as the narrator once again ultimately warns “Beware the savage jaw – of 1984.” Chunkier power chords move in to augment the “come see, come see, remember me?” change section. Things move deeper into a soul direction for the third “I’m looking for a vehicle” section, especially via bass guitar propulsion and funk strummed chords.


The final entry “Big Brother/Chant of The Ever Circling Skeletal Family” finds Julian keeping true-to-the-original reading of the initial rock portion. Tandem bass and drum propulsion with slithering buzz guitar notes around those memorable lyrics. Referencing “dust and roses,” the fey aside “or should we powder our noses?” ultimately give way to “give me steel, give me steel, give me pulses unreal.” The hook always delivers “Someone to claim us, someone to follow - Someone to shame us, some brave Apollo - Someone to fool us, someone like you - We want you Big Brother.” The songs original concept was meant for an adaptation of Orwell’s totalitarian future society 1984. When that project could not be made, at least we got this song here. Julian captures those delightful mid-track melody lines via unique synth tones. Similarly, the reinterpretation of the final chant (which is meant to echo Winston’s “two minutes of hate” depicted in Orwell’s book) benefits from modern production qualities here, and brings the album to it’s conclusion.


Check out this amazing album in full here:



Connect with Julian Shah-Tayler/The Singularity via his Social Media: Facebook - Instagram

Previous Features on Julian and his music can be found on this site here and here.

*  *  *  *  *

Last summer DCW reviewed the first single and opening track “Superflower” from The Crushing Violets forthcoming full length album “Filaments of Creation.” That album is now here in it’s entirely, and naturally curiosity has been peaked about what the other tracks sound like. With Antanina (vocals) and BP Brooks (guitars, vocals) writing all the songs, Mick Hargreaves mixed, engineered, played some additional instruments and co-produced with the band. It was recorded at Lantern Sound Recording Rig, in Manorville, NY.


Taking a sequential approach through the album, first new (to this site) track “Hollywood” emerges out of a rat-a-tat drum intro. The progression moves forward at a power ballad pacing and vocals come in tandem, with BP’s male tones out front. Those vocals are further enhanced by guitar lines echoing it’s melody. Not really about California’s movie making capital, the title word’s singular reference comes in the lyrical sequence “now the house is gray - here's a ghost inside these walls today - Hollywood seems so far away.” The following cut “It’s 2am” is an acoustic guitar (only) powered folk song ruminating on introspective thoughts had in those early morning hours. Where “your ghosts will haunt you,” “can’t find what you lost,” and “can’t hide from who you are.” Even though “you got lost among the stars” it’s important to “remember who you are,” and that you belong there.


A chugging Rolling Stones style guitar progression followed by solid drums and bass kick off “Then You Shine.” It’s laid back “Exile On Main Street” vibe echoes that watershed album’s soulful voices with Antanina’s contributions on each verse title line resolution. While BP’s vocals (and all the backing vocal production overall) deliver the poetic lyrics clearly, his guitar solo near the 2 minute mark really sings. Bigger rock production and well placed minor/seventh chords in the songs progression enhance the Antanina voiced “When We Dream.” It all comes together gloriously on the lyrical hook “We’re going where the summer’s waiting - I’m dreaming of enchanted places - We’ll be” and the powerful guitar-bass-drums instrumental section that follows. A return to introspection runs through the acoustic guitar only, predominant BP vocal on “Anyway.” Antanina adds tender harmonies to lyrical content that emphasizes “darkest dream,” “the end of time” and how ultimately “the world is a stage.”


A curious backward motion guitar effect introduces the full bass and drums accompanied, BP lead voiced “Lost in Space.” Reaching the catchy chorus hook in under a minutes, both voices harmonize on the lovely sentiment “if you just hold my hand, we could walk in the sand - Lost in Space.” A wonderfully tasty Dickey Betts style guitar solo graces the song’s midpoint, adding musical sensitivity, sweetness and light. A surprising tempo change commences at the two and a half minute mark, lifting the overall progression to a higher level. Album closer “Back to Neptune” has Antanina weaving a tale of “two lover churning deep beneath the waves” on that giant blue planet. An interesting mix of mellotron-style flutes serve up an instrumental interlude between vivid imagery of “flashing cosmic rays” with “200 billion stars to light the way.”

A full review of the albums opening track and first single “Superflower” can be found here.

Dig in to the whole album, including how to acquire it here:
 


Follow The Crushing Violets on their Social Media - Official Website - Facebook - InstagramBandcamp

*  *  *  *  * *

Friday, February 17, 2023

Enveloping Scrutiny of New and Recently Released Music and Video

The relatively mild weather here in New York this current month of February has been a welcome respite. Presently spared from backbreaking snow shoveling and near sub zero temperatures allows more time for music listening and writing reviews. Back with brand new music is a long-time friend of this site and frankly at this point a UK Legend. Another returning collective has also released stunning new material in that most-beloved hazy-gazey genre. New to the site finds the recent work of an LA-based artist also receiving the now world-famous DCW detailed analysis.


Back in 2019 this site did an extensive historical recap and review of English recording artist Sophie Ellis Bextor on the release of her orchestral “greatest hits” album “The Song Diaries.” That album and this review both did well and all was sailing along smoothly. Sophie even managed to work in a trip to Japan in early 2020, before as she says “the world tilted.” Pinned down in our homes as we waited out this crisis, Sophie kept us entertained with her Friday “Kitchen Disco” internet shows. We were welcomed into her home for these half-hour concerts. Looking back from our perspective in 2023, those shows were a delightful silver lining, allowing a view into her home life and a temporary reprieve from not being able attend shows.


When things began to open up again, Sophie started taking her “Kitchen Disco” shows on the road, much to the delight of live entertainment starved concert goers. In that time she also published a self-penned autobiography and cook book with her husband Richard Jones (which also pivoted off the “Kitchen Disco” theme, as in “Recipes From”). In addition to renewed print and tv appearances, Sophie continued her successful ongoing “Spinning Plates” podcast series, as well as spots as a DJ on BBC Radio. Now there is news of her next full-studio album “Hana” being set for release at the beginning of June this year. With this being her 7th album of entirely new material, an advance single “Breaking The Circle” has just been released and receives a detailed review below.


Deep, low-tone strings introduce the track before a cymbal swirl leads into the piano-driven progression. Sophie's vocals commence right away with her asking “do you want to know what I think?” Well – yes – indeed we do. “Do you want to hear what's in my head?” follows as a lively drum pattern thumps along in tandem with those hammering piano chords. “It's too early to go to bed” she continues. “Do you want to hear a secret? I think there may be a day when the sun doesn't rise!” Oh, my. She's posted how “it’s a song all about those philosophical conversations you have at 3am when anything feels possible,” and that may have contributed to its creation. However, one feeling here (along with the universal meaning of “breaking a circle” - ending some kind of cycle) is a reference to the current fears of a full-on nuclear war, where “the sun doesn't rise” because it's been the end of us all.


However, the mood switches to a change progression where she states how “I can see a new horizon in your eyes.” That pivots into the big chorus “here we go into the light of the great unknown” ultimately “soaring up into the twilight zone” to the resolution of “breaking the circle.” Moving forward there is a “crashing through” an “edge of destiny” calling out to “come with me and we can chase what the end might be.” Resolving with “and when the morning comes – will everything feel the same?” Late night existential musings indeed. The hard-edged piano rhythm and matched percussion continue to established a driving musical propulsion.


Can you sit a little closer” she continues to ask. “There's a magic in the night time air,” with an uplifting rise in her vocals on that final word. Repeating the “night time air” again for good measure, the bridge-to-chorus cycles around once more, this time with an alternating background vocal line running parallel against. Additional vocal overlays include a celestial “here we go” and “come with me.” Other subtle sonic chances seem to have the hammered-piano motif morphing into a more synthetic keyboard sound.  Sophie adds further vocal lines like “don't want to live like days gone bye” and “it's time to rip it up and let it die.” A quick-stop, dramatic pause momentarily punctuates – before the final Big Chorus takes the track out to its conclusion – ending on a final question - “and when the morning comes, will everything feel the same?

Listen to this latest song here:


The upcoming album 'HANA' is out 2nd June 2023, and available to pre-order now.

Connect with Sophie Ellis-Bextor online:



*  *  *  *  *

Another musical collective having a bit of history here in the DCW metaverse are the Sydney, Australia new school fuzzpop and lofi gazer 5 piece band Trillion. After prior reviews of their EP's and singles here on this site, the group has now released their debut full-length album “So Soon Now.” Having previously waxed on about their “modulating glazed and gazey guitars,” “impressionist murk,” “blissful reverie,” “buoyant bass,” “billowy guitars,” - not to mention the “warbling” and “shearing” (oh, and there must be “shearing”), a head-first dive into these new tracks follow below.


Opening (and title) track “So Soon Now” wastes no time getting off the ground as it kicks in full-throttle from the opening note. It's aggressive stomp emphasizes the bands trademark 3 guitar approach over the deeper low-end of bass and punchy drums. Male-female tandem vocals echo the Mbv/Slowdive/Blonde-Redhead fractured cadence in both diction and mix placement. There's a touch of “romantic” feel with the swooning chords that also touches on what Ringo Deathstarr does so well. Follow-up cut “Lo-Fi Days” progresses at a more measured pace, with a delightfully muted clarion-bell guitar stroke standing out as an every-4-beat delineator. As the chorus explodes with guitars and voices all crashing together in a singular sonic meld, its impressive how the drums stay clearly defined within that fray. A momentary pause at the 3 minute mark serves as buffer, before the push to conclusion (which includes an enchanting :25 second ambient guitar coda).


Third entry “Atomic Sunshine” makes inventive use of echo and delay on the opening drum beats. That is soon met by a wall of dream-gaze guitars as a snaking bassline provides counter-melody underneath. Strong tandem vocals with the females voice mixed slightly in front sing out lyrics that can actually be heard. Extended passages of softer, easier-going sentiment connect with more dynamic bursts. The album's first video single release “Cherry Blossom” is a hard-driving, forward charging affair that is self-described as “a song about the judgement that comes with living life to the fullest.” An instant affinity was felt with this track as it's title is the same name as one of our beloved cats. Although we initially named her “Sakura” it was quickly translated to Cherry Blossom (and then just Cherry), symbolizing the ephemeral nature of life.

Check out this amazing song and video here:


Fifth track “Kusanagi” (also Japanese mythology referencing a sword that represents the virtue of valor) features classic gazey pitch-bended, down-stroke guitars, double-time drumbeat and brightly stated vocals. Strategic open passages of only drums and a single guitar give reprieve as well as setting up the explosive guitars and alternate chord advancement that follow. The single title word chorus matches seamlessly with it's associated progression. “Falling Down” clocks in at a mere 2:09 making it the shortest entry on the album. The shapeless razor-burn guitar churn and submerged vocals elicits recall of something Brian Eno said when hearing a particular MBV track – calling it “the vaguest song he ever heard.” That description would apply to this cut as well. Recently released second video single “Take It Slow” brings back the bass and drums rhythm support, anchoring everything under scorching guitars and subtle melody lines. Vocals float in and out with a multi-layered chanting cadence, and chord structures following clearly defined patterns. There's a bit more emphasis on the lower-end sonic hue cycle, as guitars pitch downward in a more blended form with the bass.

Check out this metaphysical video here:


Close Your Eyes” comes on with that heart-tugging, gazey-haze that a band like the aforementioned Ringo Deathstarr frequently dabbles in. Vocals are appropriately submerged for maximum dreaminess, as those starry-eyed guitar chords churn away. Crafted melody lines emerge over the turbulent textures, exhibiting the power of a three guitar assault. “The Silent Sea” pivots off a backward-leaning guitar chord down-stroke before moving into four-on-the-floor structure. Pitch-bended off-kilter (or as they self-describe “offset”) guitars push the pace forward, while a singular unblended voice provide lyrics. A Sonic Youth-style breakdown emerges in an unexpected (but welcome) midpoint sequence. Final track “Sometimes it's Alright” is a symphonic tour-de-force of ambient experimentation. Beatless, shapeless and relying solely on texture, it is actually quite soothing in it's measured rise and equally gradual fadeout.

Check out this amazing album here:



Follow Trillion on all their Socials:

spotify.com/trillion

trillion1.bandcamp.com

facebook.com/trillionsydney

youtube.com/@trillionsydney6897

instagram.com/trillionsydney

twitter.com/trillionband


A Previous Feature Review of Trillion (which includes links to all the others on this site) can be found Here.

*  *  *  *  *

The circular way an album or artist finds their way toward a review here on this site is a curious and fascinating one. In the case of accomplished recording musician Julian Shah-Tayler, the most-likely spotting of a recent Night Crickets write-up inspired contact regarding their own recent work. As it turns out, Julian has been making music in one form or another (both in bands and solo) for a substantial amount of time now. In fact, he's written over 300 songs, which is impressive by any measure. A full-length album of original songs titled “Elysium” was released a few months ago, which now receives a deep-dive review below.


Taking note of the vintage glamour cover image photo tribute (slyly recreating Roxy Music's 1973For Your Pleasure” which featured model Amanda Lear), we're already off to a great start. Opening cut “End Of The Line” combines electronics with funk-style bass guitar and deep-vocal stylings, immediately delivering on the Bowie/Prince hybrid influence promised in the liner notes. Catchy keyboard hooks after each chorus line and in-between verses serve up pleasing synth textures. A Robert Fripp-esque guitar solo and deconstructing end-out emphasize its unexpected conclusion.  Second track “The Devil Knows” boasts the musical assistance from famous and accomplished friends in the guise of David J on bass and Mark Gemini Thwaite (henceforth referred to as MGT) on guitars. Having written about the famous David's latest output with new band Night Crickets just last month, it was 3 years ago when coverage of MGT's guitar mastery in Peter Murphy's live band first appeared here on this site. Both musicians add cachet to this intimate (yet danceable) lyrically driven song.


Romance and sensuality are the driving forces on the dreamy lovesong “Melt.” With vocalizing morphing between the aforementioned deeper-toned Peter Murphy and David Bowie's mid-range tenor, impressive lines like “I have to make you love me tonight” (as opposed to the more de rigueur “I have to make love to you”) stand out.  “Secret” pulls together throbbing synth-bass, chunky soul rhythm guitar and hand-clap percussion on verses displaying a free spirit. The chorus is lively and upbeat, with horns behind extended words for singalong emphasis. A tasty, wirey guitar solo adds a dose of rock and roll to this pop confection.  “Evolution” comes on full electronica with it's bright synth melody line and pulsating machine-driven rhythms. While still maintaining rhythmic continuity, the chorus moves into a smoother aural state, utilizing multiple-voiced harmonies for dreamy effect. Irregular guitar textures emerge as the song progresses, adding counterpoint to the dominant synth-melody line.



Opening with the howl of a wolf, “Lupine” builds around plucking bass notes and repeated audio sample. Morphing into a chugging guitar-bass+drums rocker, an analogy of human desire as an animal hunger is fully explored through the lyrics.  “All Good Soldiers” continues that simpler guitar-bass-drums blueprint further by stripping it down to the basics. Vocals are delivered with an uncanny similarity to Bowie in both tone and phrasing. A substantial instrumental section allows for buzzing guitar forays, leading into a gentle bass guitar and softer percussive accompaniment.  “Head Up High” benefits from a solid drum track and richly textured keys (via Sam West and Nathan van Hala, respectively) along with its beautiful melody and finely crafted lyrics. One of the best produced tracks on the album, the positive message presented makes it an instant favorite.


Kintsugi” featured another guest drummer, as Chris J Olivas (Berlin) lays down a raucous pattern underneath new wave guitars. Lyrical references to Japanese precious metals repair techniques serve as a metaphor for the emotional turmoil of the heart. “Earthquakes” combines ambient synths, a bold, rubbery, bouncing bass-line and heartfelt vocals that encapsulate the best 80's new wave singers. In this instance, Cy Curnin of The Fixx comes to mind. Additional lyrical points are given for working the thematic imagery of “shifting tectonic plates” in as an allegory for (once again) emotional devotion.  “Bet Your Life” is an acoustic guitar driven composition that layers in elements of buzzing ambience, busily descending bass-lines and metallic percussion. It's extended coda rewards the listener with an enveloping instrumental dreamscape.  Resolving all the themes laid out in the previous songs is final cut “Darkling U.” Syncopated electronic keyboards and percussion are met with an angular bass pattern, creating an otherworldly, futurist dance track. Elements of industrial emerge in the harsher tones and aggressive forward pace. While the songtitle reapportions something the aforementioned Prince would do (change “darling” to “darkling”), it feels more Nine Inch Nails in the synths and execution. Kudos once again to Nathan van Hala for the clarity of mix and to all involved in its brilliant production overall.

Check out this eclectic album here:



Connect with Julian Shah-Tayler/The Singularity via his Social Media here.

Facebook     -     Instagram

*  *  *  *  *