Dublin’s newest indie-pop band, St Francis have released their new single ‘These Days’.The Dublin four-piece are graduates from BIMM Institute, giving them a huge head start in highlevel live performances and musical sensibilities.So far, the band have released their well-received debut single ‘Over & Over’, which has set the table for These Days to take them to the next level. No strangers to the live scene, St. Francis are booking shows for the rest of the year. The band are just off the back of their pre-release shows at The Grand Social and The Workmans’ Cellar and will soon be announcing more gigs for the upcoming months
‘These Days’ is a luscious guzzle of indie-pop that displays the energetic and irresistible sound of St Francis. The band create a lustrous soundscape of bright guitars, buoyant rhythms and driving bass lines while shimmering synths chime in the background. It’s a heartfelt tune saturated in earworm melodies as the band discuss the complexities of relationships through refined musicianship and expressive songwriting. ‘These Days’ is a joy to listen to and beckons repeat plays, and is a fine example of the exciting sound of St Francis. Looking forward to hearing more from this talented band.
On These Days, frontman Will Ryan said: “These Days is an important song for us, not just because of the meaning and arrangement, but because it was the first time we got to be a band in the studio. Forming just before the pandemic meant we had to wait a little longer to really show what St. Francis is about, and we can’t wait for people to finally hear that”.
Driven Snow have released their debut single, ‘Trying’. Little by little Driven Snow began to emerge in the shape of a collection of songs that are at odds with, yet informed by, their collective musical outings (Kieran as a lynchpin of Delorentos and Emily as a vocalist with Republic of Loose and Stars On Fire). The pair decamped (with children, grandparents and all) to Donegal, taking their musical sketches up to Tommy McLaughlin’s Attica Studios (Villagers, S.O.A.K., Pillow Queens) and encouraging them to grow into simple, gentle tunes with a big heart and a common soul.
With just gentle guitar accompaniment and lush harmonies ‘Trying’ is a beautiful piece of music that displays Driven Snow’s ability to express emotion through delicate instrumentation and meaningful songwriting. The spacious elements within the song gently draw the listener into the track’s ethereal soundscapes and expansive atmosphere while the soft buoyant rhythms add a bite and lift to the song. The track slowly builds throughout while the sweet tone of Kieran and Emily’s vocals coo lyrics that deal with anxiety and yearning to overcome the fears we all experience while navigating through life. The duo gracefully translate these feelings through a few short yet powerfully evocative words “My dreams get dark at three am and I’m not so zippy, like I pretend but I am trying”.
‘Trying’ is a charming tune that provides an exciting glimpse into the talent of Driven Snow. Looking forward to hearing more little gems from this duo.
Ten Hands High have released their new single ‘i don’t need a lobster’.Based in London, made in Leeds, Ten Hands High’s sound has evolved drastically since their inception in 2019. They have consistently sold-out headline shows in their two hometowns and have supported bands like Glass Caves and Luna Bay. Jack Saunders of BBC Radio 1 called their debut EP’s lead single called Sweet, “euphoric”. The band have been played on regional BBC Introducing, 6Music’s BBC Introducing Mixtape and Radio X’s X-Posure, as well as being featured on playlists like Spotify’s Students Union and Amazon’s Fresh Indie.
‘’i don’t need a lobster’ is a laid back listening experience that oozes sweet earworm melodies, sleek instrumentation and sunkissed tones. R&B elements twinkle between a luminous indie-pop soundscape while the lyrics suggest instead of putting pressure on the idea of a soul-mate, be present in a relationship and what will happen, will happen. ‘i don’t need a lobster’ is a fresh catchy tune that is a joy to listen to again and again. Enjoy.
How an artist chooses to portray their music within the live setting can add an exciting facet to their sound that allows listeners to experience the artist’s music in a whole new way. Such an experience occurred last Saturday when Daniel Fitzpatrick aka Badhands delivered a stunning performance of his new album ‘Far Away’ along with some of his beloved hits during his headline show at Whelan’s Dublin.
Support act Anderson took to the stage andassured the crowd saying “You never know I might be someone special. And you’ll never know if you’re not listening and you’ll never be able to say I was there. Trust me, inside info, you’re in the presence of someone f**king special” before delving into tender tunes that oozed elements of pop, country and indie. Anderson is the solo venture of Daniel Anderson, a charming musician who has the remarkable ability to hush the chattering of a crowd and enthral them with his witty banter and sweet melodies. “I’m here for Dan to celebrate his album launch just like you. I’d appreciate any applause you have saved up for him to share a bit with me and also attention if you could share a bit of that sh*t, always goes down well”. On the nightAnderson’s songs and tongue in cheek humour went down a treat, especially the short and melodically lush ‘I’ll get back to you when I’ve Got Nothing Better To Do’ and ‘Cecilia’s Sister Medley’ which musically pays homage to Simon & Garfunkel’s ‘Cecilia’ and The Beatles ‘Get Back’ in the most spectacular way. It was a fun and light-hearted set with songs that not only showcased lush melodies and bright tones but lyrical substance as well.
The resounding rhythmic stomp of ‘They Know You Better’ announced the beginning of Badhands‘ terrific set. With the full band behind him, the set was a sprawling raucous affair. Each song came to life and overflowed with vibrant kinetic energy within the live setting. The tender ‘When I Think About You’ and ‘Quiet and Still’ filled the venue with swoon-worthy tempos, sensual bass grooves, twinkling keys and hip-swaying rhythms. On the album these songs exude a more delicate persona, however, live, they became dynamic and expressive – a nice surprise for all present on the night.
The band onstage ( Chris Barry, Tom Cosgrave, Aoife Ruth, Ken Mooney, and David Tapley ) played their instruments with admirable finesse and perfectly complemented Daniel Fitzpatrick’s warm vocal delivery through heartfelt melodies and rich musicianship filled with thrilling guitar riffs, rhythmic drum manoeuvres and wonderful violin embellishments. The crowd lapped up the energy, some embraced and sang as they swayed to songs from the artist’s EP project ‘Oceans’, (which was inspired by the unique nature of each of the world’s five oceans).
Badhands put on a show to remember, and an unexpected encore delivered a memorable moment for the audience. Daniel Fitzpatrick returned to the stage with violinist Aoife Ruth after chants for “one more tune” to perform a time-stopping performance that left the crowd in awe. It was a magical end to a night of exquisite music. Looking forward to seeing Badhands live again soon.
Following the recent hit ‘Champagne Butterflies’, Wild Youth are back with their new single, ‘Seventeen’. I caught up with vocalist David Whelan to chat about the new single, the band’s upcoming EP and what they have planned for the upcoming months.
‘Seventeen’ is a cinematic tune that instantly rushes with passionate musicianship. Delicate keys flutter through suspenseful drums while supple guitar chimes throughout as the band perfectly capture the adrenaline of youth through expressive instrumentation and wistful lyrics.
“ I think the lyrics sort of facilitated the whole song. We had so much time over covid to think about our childhoods and our easier, fun days where there were no worries, you know what I mean? Your biggest worry was whether you were going to beat your mate at FIFA on PlayStation that night, it was so easy. So, all the lyrics flowed very naturally. The lyrics really honed in I feel, on the energy and the drive of the song, and then it just felt right to just stick to it and make it an anthem. So yeah, it was more lyric drawn. “
The song was co-written with JC Stewart. Whelan explained to me how that collaboration came about.
“We know JC very well. We’re good pals with JC. We actually met JC when we were supporting Kodaline on the European tour. JC was opening the whole show and he was on his own. It was just him and his acoustic guitar and he was travelling around on buses and planes and all that sort of stuff on his own. So we just took him into our group and he’d come into our changing room backstage before we play gigs. We got really close and we stayed in touch ever since. We’ve wrote loads of songs with him. One of the lads in the band actually lived with him for a while in London. So me and Connor were in the studio in London with JC and that’s when Seventeen was born that day. We just started talking lets write a song about when we were younger and life was easy, and we weren’t always stressed and thats how it happened”
Co-writing allows for a fresh perspective on an artist’s music. We discussed the importance of collaborating with other songwriters, to bring diversity to an artist’s writing style or sound.
“Yeah, for sure. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it at all. I think you hit the nail on the head with what you said it does bring a different perspective. It’s very refreshing to sit down in a room and have a chat with someone and see what they do and see their thought process and there’s no right or wrong answer to any of this, it’s creation. You’re just throwing stuff at a wall and seeing if it sticks and if it feels good and it resonates and everybody has a different view on life. It’s so crazy actually when I say that out loud. Everyone has a different view and everybody has a lot of similarities. The human species, we can relate to each other very well. But you’ve lived a different life to me. I’ve lived a different life to you, but we can find that little thing that brings us together. So it’s cool. Yeah, it actually is really cool when you collaborate with somebody. You’re bringing two different views of a story together. It’s just fun as well. It’s fun being in a room with somebody and just bounce ideas and having the craic, music is good, it brings joy. So to share that with somebody in a creation process is cool”
‘Seventeen’ is the first single to be taken from Wild Youth’s upcoming EP. The song gives fans a sense of what the rest of the EP will sound like.
“I think it gives a little bit of a teaser to what’s to come yeah. We are actually in the studio now recording the next single, and it’s like Seventeen on steroids. It’s a beast so yeah, theres more like that to come.”
‘Seventeen’ showcases a different side to Wild Youth’s sound. I wondered was this the product of trying to capture the atmosphere the lyrics allude to or was it the band experimenting with their sound.
“ I think, it’s a bit of both. There’s definitely been a natural progression into that as well. Our first song we ever released All or Nothing that’s more indie, like electric guitar-heavy. We kind of went back towards that a bit, naturally, but also we wanted to. We definitely wanted to. The song had to be like that, Seventeen, that’s the way it had to be heard and we love that sound. So yeah, it’s a bit of both a bit of a natural progression and our own choice”
The pandemic affected everyone in the music industry in different ways and Whelan explained how it affected the band with writing and recording this next collection of songs.
“Yeah, it did in a way. A lot of studios shut down during covid. Connor’s in London, we’re here. So I was going back and forth. But then sometimes it was hard to because sometimes I couldn’t actually go over. So it did slow down the process a small bit. We found ourselves doing a lot of these zooms, which we all love. Yeah, it was different. It was definitely a change that we had to get used to. But we’re back now. So it’s all fun. We were in the studio yesterday with people and yeah, we’re back doing it like it should be done.”
Wild Youth’s Sold Out Spring Tour saw them take in venues across Ireland and the UK including The Academy in Dublin and Omera in London. They will also play support to Lewis Capaldi for his three sold-out Irish shows as well as support Westlife at their hugely anticipated show in Cork’s Pairc Ui Chaoimh as well as making headline appearances at Electric Picnic, Indiependence, Boat Yard Festival and more.
“It was sick. We just finished our own tour. It was pretty beautiful to be honest. I got into this because I love performing. That’s the main reason why I wanted to be in a band I wanted to tour. I can’t sit still for too long. So being on the road is the perfect thing for me. I get itchy feet if I’m just not doing that. So yeah, it was absolutely phenomenal. Covid was crazy, for artists in general and a lot of people that work in the arts. We had crew affected by it. It was crazy for us because there was a few times in my mind during it where I was like, oh wow will we ever get to do this again. You know? That was a scary thought because I’ve never not done something like this. I’ve always done gigs or been in bands and, obviously, Wild Youth is my life. So this tour was just the most emotional, beautiful tour I’ve ever been on. It’s probably the best I’ve ever done. Personally, the most one I’ve ever enjoyed. I’ll never take any of this for granted ever again because I know how quick it was taken away by covid for that period of time and it was a shock to the system. I don’t want to ever feel that again. So it [the tour] was absolutely phenomenal”
Live shows can be overwhelming. The energy when performing is unlike anything else and performing can be an intense experience on the body and mind. Whelan explained what it was like for him to return to the stage.
“Yeah big time. I don’t know if you’ve ever seen us play, but we go crazy upthere we are very energetic. It’s like playing 18 football matches in a space of an hour and fifteen minutes. I’m not even joking. It’s very strenuous on the body. But we got ready for it. We were ready to go again whenever it was going to be allowed. So yeah, we were pretty ready. But that adrenaline feeling, that boost of adrenaline. I’ve never felt that anywhere in my life apart from there. That was crazy the first time I felt it again after the two and a half years. We played our first show and it was sold out and the crowd literally went crazy for the songs and I mean crazy. I was like, it was an overload, it was like a bunny overload, I thought I was going to have a heart attack or something, I didn’t know what to do. So yeah, that was something that I needed to readjust to again, being able to absorb all that energy that’s coming at you and not pass out”
Wild Youth have a big year ahead with an EP in the works and a lot of gigs to delight fans.
“We’re back in the studio. The next single is being done up right now. So newmusic will be coming and we’ve loads of gigs. Festival season is back so we are playing a lot of festivals. There’s a lot of gigging and a lot of new music. The fact that gigs are back now we just want to play all the time. So you’ll see us everywhere hopefully playing gigs and new music”
Wild Youth are constantly refining their songwriting and sound. ‘Seventeen’ is a sublime display of their ability to create engaging, energetic and heartfelt tunes filled with irresistible indie-pop. The band always delivers on a solid anthem and if ‘Seventeen’ is anything to go by the upcoming EP is set to be glorious.
Cork-based singer-songwriter SAL has released her new single, ‘Bullet in the Heart’.‘Bullet in the Heart’ was co-written by SAL with the late Scott English (writer of ‘Mandy’). It is the first release under the SAL pseudonym, as well as the first release since SAL signed a publishing deal with prestigious West Cork-based publishing company, AtSongs, and a management deal with London-based Charlie B Management. Having unveiled a host of new material at Liverpool Irish Festival in 2021, SAL is ready to perform her new songs, with live shows in Ireland (Whelan’s, Dublin 5th May; and Cyprus Avenue, Cork 2nd June) as well as opening for Mica Paris at Woolwich Works, London on 23rd April, and a 12-date tour of Germany through May.
‘Bullet in the Heart’ is a sweet 80’s infused alternative pop tune that surges with rich musicianship and irresistible melodies. SAL drifts her supple vocals over a dreamy melody while punctuated beats and shimmering synths flesh out the glittering backdrop. There is a soft sun-kissed atmosphere within the track as SAL uses rich electronic textures, warm guitar embellishments and R&B tones throughout – highlighting SAL’s deft musical prowess and emotive songwriting. Boasting glorious soundscapes ‘Bullet in the Heart’ is a joy to listen to and a sublime new single from SAL.
About the track, SAL said: “It’s a song about resilience in the face of loneliness and being in love…while still being fearless of all that life throws at you in the midst of chaos”.
Ambient electronic trio Dirty Dreamer have released their glorious debut album ‘The Everyday in Bloom’. I caught up with two-thirds of the band Daithí O’Connor and Louise Gaffney to chat about the album, creating music with their improv style and their upcoming show in The Workman’s Cellar.
Filled with ambient soundscapes and lush textures ‘The Everyday in Bloom’ was four years in the making mirroring the band’s relaxed pace in meticulously creating each song.
Daithí: “Yeah, just taking our time. There was no rush on it really, we were just having fun and obviously the pandemic happened and all that. But even before, we were just having fun and really had no timeline. I think that was something lovely about this. There was no timeline as such or any pressure at all because we’ve been in a situation before that we set aside that time to write and that time to record all that kind of stuff. This was all a little bit more natural, laid back, I suppose.”
The band were part of the choice-nominated electro-folk outfit Come On Live Long. Dirty Dreamer showcases a different side of the trio. I wondered if it was exciting and liberating exploring this new sound.
Louise: “Whether it was a premeditated change or not I’m not sure. When we started this project, we didn’t even really call it a band for the first little while. We sort of went away and we were playing together and improvising around different sounds and a key part of it was we all changed our instrumentation a little. We were all trying different instruments a little bit as well. So it was really slow figuring out what we liked and what we wanted to pursue. That happened before we even put a name on it as a project. When we started realising it had a sound of its own, and it seemed that we had been crafting that, that was when we were like okay, this project now needs a name and it needs, a look and feel as well as maybe a goal, not necessarily deadline but definitely a goal and we started recording basically everything we did from that point, once we had that sound. We just pressed record on every rehearsal session and started gathering a huge archive of recordings.”
The songs on the album at times appear to refer to the beauty of the world around us, and the importance of taking in the small moments of serenity between the chaos of modern life. However, Daithí and Louise explained to me the album isn’t intentionally a concept album.
Daithí: “ I would say no, I don’t think it’s a concept album. there are threadsthrough it. We would write and rehearse all after a day’s work. We come in here in the evenings so all the highs and lows of the day just anyone’s day, kind of informs everything else. So maybe you could tie content onto that, I suppose.”
Louise: “I don’t think there is, the songs all have their own micro themes within them. Some of them maybe link and some of them maybe don’t. But if there’s a concept in there it was the way of writing actually. So all of the origins of each song just come out of hours of improvisation. So just literally free. Someone might do something someone responds to it, and then someone adds a thing and all of a sudden it starts to build into a song or starts to approach something with a bit of structure. Because we recorded everything that happened in the room, for every rehearsal session we had or writing session we had, we’d have a couple of hours that we would go and listen throughout the week. We would take the sounds, everyone would listen and then highlight little parts that we thought we loved or thought we could work on again and revisit. So as a process that was really new. Having, individual time to listen and decide what was working and what maybe wasn’t and then to come back next week and go again.”
The band created a lot of material over the four years. We discussed how overwhelming the task of filtering through all that material was.
Daithí: “ Yeah we have hours and hours of stuff. So what would happen is, we play and jam away here. Then Ken [McCabe], who’s not here at the moment, he was like the archivist and he’d be the filter as well. He would listen back and say, I think this is good, I think this is good. Then he would send it on to us two. Very often there was loads of that and there was weeks where you would just constantly be doing new stuff. You’d have to go back and say hold on, let’s just put the brakes on now because we have folders and folders of so much stuff and we’re just gonna keep writing new music. We need to stop. So for maybe a month, say, one in four months, we would put the brakes on and develop those ideas a little bit more. Then when we got tired of doing that, we would come in and say okay let’s work on that song we were doing two months ago. But then what we always do is we start off playing and then we would just play for the rest of the evening. We wouldn’t actually come back to that. So we had to be a little bit strict on ourselves to say okay, let’s stop improvising and playing and let’s put a bit of structure on it. “
‘The Everyday in Bloom’ is an ambient album filled with soft instrumentation, hazy synths and ethereal soundscapes. ‘Caddy’ is a fine example of this. The track revolves around a wonderful vocal melody accompanied by subtle guitar, earthy elements and electronics. Though the song is filled with intricate instrumentation the trio manage to maintain a sparse and light atmosphere throughout.
Louise: “That one’s an interesting one because it could be the oldest one on it. That would have been a really old archived recording that Ken had written just the guitar part for. It was resurrected when we were in the middle of maybe…. we’d maybe done a few of the other tracks and I remember it in an email thread and I pulled it up and was like this was really cool. We should maybe try to work this… when we brought it back, we just played it a lot in the room and just tried to see where the melody is going to come from, where all the other instrumentation is gonna sit, how it will layer up to make it more interesting. So it could have just been guitar and vocals and nothing else but it has a lot of ambient stuff going on in it.”
Daithí: “ That recording is recorded live in this room and I didn’t know it all that well. So I’m looking at Ken constantly to see what he’s doing on the guitar and I’m following him. Which is something that we’ve never done. Usually, when you go into studio, you know every note that you’re going to play. It’s premeditated, you know what to do. But for this one it was kind of just very reactive. I was definitely reacting to what Ken was doing. I had to look at his hand constantly to see what he was going to do next. But it worked. That’s the recording that you hear on the album”
Louise: “I think in terms of a song where you’re using words to create meaning somehow, that’s the one that I always go back to as maybe one of the more coherent songs because it does have a really strong theme and it’s about something and it’s a story told over time, in a way that maybe some of our others aren’t maybe as explicit. So I always liked listening to that one myself and quite pleased with the writing side of it”
‘Downhill’ is another special moment within the album. The distorted intro is a bit of a shock when you first hear it, especially after the peaceful and soothing nature of the previous track ‘Caddy’. It beautifully shows the experimental nature of the band’s music as they momentarily break away from the tranquilising wall of sound of previous tracks to inject a dash of edge into the album.
Daithí: “Again, that comes back to what Louise has mentioned before, a kind of stepping outside your comfort zone and find a new territory. That sound is just off a piece of equipment that we use all the time in this room. We knew we wanted to incorporate that because it’s the sound of the room. It’s the sound that we make in the room so we knew it had to be recorded. I suppose it might be difficult for the listener, maybe at the start because it’s quite a juxtaposition sound, quite… harsh ..to start and then the guitar comes and that’s what was nice about all of this. Before we would have second-guessed that and said oh they’re two really clashy sounds and for somewhere else, it might not have worked but where we are now is in a huge rehearsal space.There are loads of bands playing all the time. So when you’re walking down the corridor, you’re hearing the sound of loads of bands inside a room. So the soundscape going down to the kitchen for cup of tea is massive. So that definitely fed into it. “
Dirty Dreamer have masterfully created an album that captures the free expressive nature of their sound. The ability to capture this element of their art in a piece of music let alone for an entire album is sometimes a difficult task for artists. However, Dirty Dreamer have pulled it off spectacularly.
Daithí: “Yeah, That’s it. That’s the mission accomplished for saying that yeah “
Louise: “Yeah it’s a really interesting thing. I only happened across it recently in a podcast and it got me thinking but that’s exactly what we did there. There was this psychologist she was talking about how you have to use a very childlike free state of mind to create something original. Then you need to use a very different mindset to edit it.So if you’re already using your edit brain when you’re trying to create, you’re not going to get very far down the road or you won’t get somewhere interesting. So it reminded me [ of us ] – the improv its the child brain, we don’t actually police ourselves and we just do whatever. Then there were those months where we would act different in the room and itwas all business we’d all be sitting at the table and that struck me, that is the process that we use, you know, we didn’t try to edit in the moment or try to think about the outcome. Because it didn’t matter. It was like we were generating so much, the outcome, we couldn’t even think about it in the moment.”
Daithí: “It’s striking the balance between that I suppose”
Considering the trio were working on these songs for over four years, I wondered if all the songs had evolved and taken new directions since their first inception.
Daithí: “Good question. I would say some have, some definitely haven’t. The likes of Caddy again. That sounds like when we played it in the room. We played it a couple of times, but it really didn’t change all that much.“
Louise :“Yeah. ‘Did You Think I Would Forget’, that longer ambient one. That changed quite a lot over time because the initial idea was a different type of track. It wasn’t a song structure as much as it was a soundscape and so it had to evolve over time to get somewhere interesting. We were working with a small little nugget of something that needed quite a bit added to it. So that was quite different.”
The track ‘Anywhere’ was the one that sparked my previous question. It is a beautiful song with balmy guitar and soft dance-like beats. The track’s soft layering and melodic progressions made me think the song had been meticulously crafted and could have originated as a different concept altogether from what we hear on the album.
Louise: “That is a good question. That song was kind of like that”
Daithí: “yeah, that I suppose went through a couple of iterations. The thing that got us with that was the arrangement. The sound was always there, butit’s just the arrangement as to what goes where. That was recorded quite a lot.“
Dirty Dreamer are set to perform live on Thursday 2nd June at The Workman’s Cellar. We discussed what fans can expect from the show
Daithí: “So the idea for the live show is to recreate what we do in this room. But put it on a stage. Now, obviously not like the constant tea breaks and stuff like that but to have it quite fluid, like it is in here and try and represent that as best we can in the live environment which is what we’re trying to do at the minute and it’s loads of fun.”
The live show promises to deliver the same experimental and free approach the trio took to create the album resulting in slightly changed versions of the songs.
Daithí: “Yeah, exactly changed versions of the songs and then trying to see how we can link songs together without a break.
Louise: “Yeah even allowing space for us to actually improvise a little bit where there’s longer pauses that we can noodle around and find that same improv that we would have used to create the songs somewhere in the live set, in between the more structured pieces.”
The band experimented and learned a lot about themselves and their music during this process. I asked Daithí and Louise from their experience so far, what advice would they give to a budding young artist.
Louise : “ I can only speak to maybe the lessons I’ve learned as opposed to solid advice. I think that big one of not worrying about the outcome too much comes back to me constantly because that just scuppers you so much and it’s the one thing you want to do when you’re trying to start. It’s like I want to make an album or I want to make an EP and that’s really to be thought about later. You got to go in and create a load of stuff first before you start aiming for that and know what you’re about and what you want to sound like. You have to play a lot and play with other people, involve other people that’s a huge thing. Find your people that you want to make music with because it’s lonely on your own.”
Daithí: “ Find people on the same wavelength and spend time playing – just play and don’t worry all that kind of stuff. That’ll come and if the music is good that will all fit together. Yeah, don’t worry too much about the outcome because if you’re into music, you’re into music, that’s the bottom line. It’s not about all the other stuff, if that happens, that happens it doesn’t really make a difference, you’re still going to be in a sweaty rehearsal room jamming away”
Dirty Dreamer have a unique and experimental sound that is raw and melodically rich. They don’t shy away from allowing their artistic unconscious write the music. This lucid way of creating is what makes ‘The Everyday In Bloom’ such a compelling album. It’s a wonderful listening experience filled with expressive soundscapes, hazy atmospheres and refined musicianship.
Manchester-based Freeda are set to release their new single ’Better On Your Own’ via Ditto Music.Formed in 2017, Freeda spent their formative years establishing themselves in their hometown, building a committed following and selling out headline shows along the way. Highlights so far include selling out their headline slot at the iconic Deaf Institute in Manchester, playing numerous festivals including Y Not Festival, Tramlines, Dot 2 Dot and 110 Above, and amassing over 500,000 views across social media platforms for their series of videos “The Corona Sessions”. 2019 also saw the band start up a production partnership with highly acclaimed production duo Sugar House.
Drenched in sparkling indie-pop melodies and sleek musicianship, ‘Better On Your Own’ is a stunning new single from Freeda. The band elevate this jaunty number with washes of ethereal synths while driving drums and bass grooves creates a body moving foundation. Freeda are becoming known for their hook-laden tunes and ‘Better On Your Own’ follows this trend superbly. The track is an immersive experience that is a joy to listen to again and again. With a catchy sing-along chorus and lush melodies teamed with sharp guitar riffs, the song is an energetic blast of anthemic indie rock.
Klubber Langhave announced their first live show in a very long time:Wed 13 April at the Workman’s Cellar in Dublin. Special guests on the night are FIFA Records labelmates First Class & Coach.
Klubber Lang are a band not to miss. They deliver a sound that oozes slick alternative rock mangled within an intoxicating grime-filled soundscape. The band’s music is a glorious and wholly consuming listening experience. It is sure to be a knockout show in The Workman’s Cellar, Dublin on April 13th.
At the beginning of 2021, Klubber Lang released two singles (‘There, There’ and ‘Not My Day’) and shortly afterwards signed with FIFA Records. Another three singles followed (‘Sleep Well’, ‘I Will Not Wait’ and ‘This Place’) on the Cork imprint, with more releases planned for 2022.
Check them out live on April 13th in The Workman’s Cellar, Dublin
Corner Boy have returned with their highly anticipated new single ‘Blackstairs Winter Snow’.The track is the first single to be released from Corner Boy’s upcoming debut album. This rhythm-driven anthem rushes with heartfelt songwriting, invigorating melodies and glorious instrumentation. Corner Boy blends the rush of indie rock with traditional elements and soft country twangs to create a rich and lively listening experience. The song escalates from a brooding, sparsely arranged intro to pulsing rhythmic verses and a full-bodied chorus before moving into a kinetic crescendo filled with strings, stomping drums and guitar embellishments. Showcasing warm vocals and adrenaline-induced instrumentation, ‘Blackstairs Winter Snow’ is a breathtaking new single from Corner Boy.
Stream ‘Blackstairs Winter Snow’ below
Author: Danu
Indie: (n) an obscure form of rock which you only learn about from someone slightly more hip than yourself.