Autocamper - Summertime
Manchester by spiritual way of Dunedin, the janglepop revivalists (if it ever needs reviving, or indeed counts as one) have their calendar all wrong but their spirit absolutely in the right place, scratchy and jolting while borrowing The Clean's organ melodies.
HONESTY - TORMENTOR
Formed from the ashes of Eagulls, HONESTY really clicked for us seeing their front-projections and elusiveness heavy live set at Swn festival last month. Florence Shaw contributes to U R HERE, their debut album out February 7th, but there's nothing but the rocky undercurrent of post-punk about their sound, indebted much more to dark trip-hop, eddying synth waves that almost resurrect chillwave, glitchy IDM pulses and deep bass churn that gradually overwhelm in semi-restrained intensity.
John Glacier - Found
The London MC and producer has been doing interesting things for a couple of years now, culminating for the first phase in Like A Ribbon, out February 14th. The electronics fall over each other in stuttering beats and arpeggiated loops whilst Glacier's voice has the best female British rappers' sense of poetic misleading understatement.
Laundromat Chicks - Sunburn
Another summery song released just as the weather changes from autumn to winter? What's going on? Our favourite Viennese return with what might qualify as a countrified shuffle that flirts with the dreamiest of acoustic indiepop, occasionally sticks the fuzz pedals on just to remind you what they can do, then lapses into a quick anthemic coda just because. Third album Sometimes Possessed is out on 24th January... and they're coming over to the UK at last! Only confirmed gig so far is The Great Escape, which presumably means one tiny show full of VIP wristband holders, something in London and nothing else ever because nobody outside the south-east is allowed to enjoy any good things any more.
Man/Woman/Chainsaw - EZPZ
The sort of title track from their debut EP Eazy Peazy is as good a place as any to get into M/W/C's command of lift-and-separate dramatics (although if you blanche at Brixton Windmill bands exhibiting strings-laden melodrama indebted to Isaac-era Black Country New Road, you're going to hate what's coming soon), uplifted by Lola Cherry's shifting martial drumming.
Mary In The Junkyard - This is My California
Another Swn highlight, the trio's new single is more straightforwardly ethereal and sepia-toned nostalgic than the 'Big Thief at the Windmill'-style recent This Old House EP, but straightforward is its own concept when songs shift and express unease like theirs do.
Minor Conflict - Glue
Newly signed to the rarely less than fascinating PRAH Recordings, Bristolians Minor Conflict have that classic synth/bass/harp power trio line-up, vocalists Natalie Whiteland and Josh Smyth swapping lines before launching into a fascinating tapestry of abstract poetics, occasional sprechgesang, wordless chorale, angular bursts reminiscent of labelmates Pozi, jazzy percussion and delicate, well, harp. Who knows what it will all mean when Parallels EP is released on January 24th.
The Orchestra (For Now) - Wake Robin
So, as we were saying, Brixton Windmill bands exhibiting strings-laden melodrama indebted to Isaac-era Black Country New Road. Spectacular opening the Mountain stage as Green Man Rising winners and subject to the traditional whispered hype based on that one bloke who puts full sets on YouTube, there's seven of them, their debut single crosses the eight minute threshold and is a tumbling riot of dramatically intricate violin and piano flourishes and polyrhythmic drumming outbreaks in multiple movements, even, from languid to impassioned.
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