Tag: Congleton Chronicle
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Joshua Fineberg: Sonic Fictions
This is not an easy work and is for those who like their music atmospheric and challenging. It’s music that’s meant to be played live, the physical placing of musicians and mics in relation to audiences being key. The sleeve notes say works are not built around narrative or realism but are indebted to modernist…
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Middle Kids: Lost Friends
Good news: Middle Kids will sound great at any festival you catch them at, with their lively indie pop that varies from song to song; you’ll not get bored and the music is all very familiar. Bad news: on CD it’s all a bit over the place and ultimately lets itself down because they lack…
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Damian Le Bas The Stopping Places: A Journey Through Gypsy Britaino
This delightful book sees Romany Damian Le Bas follow in his gran’s footsteps, stopping at atchin tans, the old Romany stopping places. Granny did it with horse-drawn wagons and bender tents, doing seasonal work, Le Bas does it in a Ford Transit (the compulsory Traveller conveyance) doing music videos and appearing on Radio Four’s Today.…
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Lily Allen: Shame
While Ange Hardy sings about her personal experiences and expands this into wise advice on living, Allen sings about herself. There is a difference. This new CD charts her personal life: broken marriage, social media harassment and all. It feels a bit lightweight, and even the sharp lyrics are good only for the first couple…
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Re-TROS: Before The Applause
We reviewed this late last year but caught them live at Bluedot and they were outstanding. They’re from “Beijing, China”, as singer/guitarist Hua Dong introduced them, like there’s any other kind of Beijing. He was a compelling performer, playing keys and willing the music to do his bidding, as he erratically waved his arms about,…
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Bluedot’s stars shine brightly
It’s fair to say that life really does get no better than the opening song at a Flaming Lips gig: music so happy it brings a lump to the throat, confetti cannons, giant balloons and lasers. France might think winning the World Cup was a top moment, but even they’d probably concede that hearing Race…
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A world of pure imagination
Thousands of festivalgoers began to descend on Scholar Green, on Friday (17th August) for the annual weekend of extraordinary escapism. And as the 2019 edition of the Just So festival at Rode Hall proved, it gets bigger and better each year. Just So promises a secret and joyous world — offering parents and children the…
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Ange Hardy: Bring Back Home
This is a lovely CD in all senses of the word. Much as we hate those reviewers on Amazon who rate an album as five stars because it arrived on time, anyone holding the CD is going to be favourably biased before a note rings out. The sleeve and packing is beautiful, with an embossed…
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Dan + Shay: Dan + Shay
This album sees US country duo Dan Smyers and Shay Mooney take a laid-back, pop approach to country that in places is almost boyband/commercial RnB in sound. It’s enjoyable and playable. They sing about everyday things that every one can relate to: opener Alone Together is about two lonely souls in a bar: “I couldn’t…
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Tom Bailey: Science Fiction
This comes 27 years after the release of the Thompson Twins’ eighth and final album Queer, and is the band’s founder and front man’s debut solo album. Whatever else he’s been doing, he’s stashed away some good songs. This manages to sound both like a throwback to the 80s, and something modern. The song-writing is…