Fire Rec.    Virgin Passages : Distance -LP & digipack-(UK,2008)***°

This is a mini-CD (23’04”) of this promising new band for the newly born psychfolk scene. Most of the album is like an early night preparation to go into a spiritual beauty sleep (an alternative for an awakening, -our lives are already too busy so why no go to sleep in beauty and with some powers-), like a communal ritual, into sections of songs and improvisation, be prepared! The dreamy vocal arrangements are beautifully crisscrossed in layers of repetition and singing along in harmony, there is an attractive rather colourful drum/percussion lead part, an induced dancing with the mind hypnosis, some additional spacey keyboards part, and many layers close in harmony but also some crisscross layering inducing the trance. The sections direct towards a lullaby that should bring peace not tiredness, in a form of huge proportion where the 5-piece band with 2 sound as if with 11 or so, singing, with electric guitars and drums in the background, weighing on the spirituality of the moment. Just the last piece, is a bit of a different moment, although it fits still well, a brighter day moment of expression in psychfolk style, a beautiful James Joyce poem interpretation (which I knew before from this compilation), where the band shows the same technique of crisscross-layering, with more clarity and with full charm.

Audio on http://www.hbdirect.com/...
Video : "I want you to sleep"
Label info : http://www.firerecords.com/...
Info and audio : http://www.myspace.com/virginpassages
Other reviews : http://iheartau.com/reviews/virgin-passages-distance/
& http://playlouder.com/content/16851/virgin-passages-distance
& http://www.godisinthetvzine.co.uk/content/content_detail.php?id=2553&type=Albums
& http://drownedinsound.com/releases/12982
"Psychedelic" or "Different" Indie Folk-pop/rock reviews page 8 :

Virgin Passages (UK), The Tiny (S), Our BrotherThe Native,
Au, Matthew Bayot, Out Like Lambs (US), St.Stephen (D), Vuk (FIN)












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Determine Rec.    The Tiny : Close Enough (S,2004)****

The first album of The Tiny. This is mostly a song based album, of a colourful emotional, melodically dancing-a-bit-like-a-butterfly voice of Ellekari Larsson accompanied by cello (Leo Svensson) and double bass (Johan Berthling) and piano/organ/harmonium mostly. The songs reveal a true romantic nature (made for true love) which is truly inflicting (but just look through some of the confessions). Highly recommended.

Determine Rec.    The Tiny : Starring; someone like you (S,2006)****

The second album starts from a richer range of a production world of expressions, starting already in the first tracks with additional toypiano, reverb loops, rich vocal harmony arrangements, piano lead, orchestrations,... The expressions take more than one step further since the previous album. “Mother” almost sounds like coming from a musical, is deep in expressions (taking also one recognisable line from the Beatles), and flows also really high. Also “Know your demons” take the song to a comparable height. Also this gets a full arrangement, with additional percussion, and a complete lala choir. The rest of the album builds up further like an ambitiously orchestrated/arranged “rock” opera, and ends with a really grand finale (with the inclusion of ghosts of vocal arrangements and a string as well as a wind orchestra) on “my greatest fear”. An album that has strong tensions again and again, that will leave no one untouched.

Audio on http://www.eyeballstore.com/...
on ecard : http://www.eyeballrecords.com/ecards/thetiny/
Info : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tiny
Info and audio : http://www.myspace.com/thetinythetiny
Homepage : http://www.thetiny.net/
Other reviews 'starring' : http://www.punknews.org/review/6320
& http://www.culturebully.com/review-the-tiny-starring-someone-like-you
& http://amplifiermagazine.com/reviews/cds/the_tiny_cd_ep.php
Other reviews 'close enough' : http://www.cokemachineglow.com/record_review/325/the-tiny
with audio : http://cdbaby.com/cd/thetiny
Fat-Cat Rec.    Our Brother The Native : Parting Marrows -mp3- (US,2008)****

Our Brother The Native, for me, with each release sound different. Even when this is, sadly, an official MP3 only release, it has all the qualities that should have found a bit more materialised form than this. It is really perfectly produced because there is a sound collage involved that can be complex at times, -while it rarely finds a result like this, that it keeps a very clear sound with it-, as if various locations, events and recordings all flew together into and before one event and expression or composition, the sometimes sad, sometimes happy for the communal cooperation song expressions led in this music. One background layer, a touch of the exotic, comes from ethnical sources, voices from the past that, like the front cover seems to say, are carried along the elephant, along with the separately recorded children choir and school days environmental voices and glockenspiel rambling loops, while the band members also vibrantly sing and play along with. The droning harmonium and piano sounds sad, while the shakers, handclaps and percussions with the singing are much more celebrative.

Audio : "Parting marrows"
Videos on http://www.youtube.com/... or http://www.thespacelab.tv/...
Label info : http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/release.php?id=274
Homepage : http://www.obtn.biz/ & with audio : http://www.myspace.com/ourbrotherthenative
Other reviews : http://www.themilkfactory.co.uk/st/2008/10/our-brother-the-native-parting-marrows-fat-cat-records/
& http://www.thetripwire.com/news/2008/9/25/new-music-thursdays-our-brother-the-native-parting-marrows/
& http://www.thelineofbestfit.com/2008/11/our-brother-the-native-parting-marrows-ep/
Interview : http://www.cmumusicnetwork.co.uk/ssq/ourbrotherthenative.html
Previous reviews here and here
Micropol Rec.    St.Stephen : Behold (D,2009)**°

Laying a bit in between a more acoustic Shiny Gnomes and The God Box, two of his other bands, this might be the most mellow psychpop project of Limo, with the help of some friends (Zattl on electric guitar, Tatjana Schwetschenko on vocals on three tracks (replacing Fit to a degree compared to his third project, Fit and Limo), Carter Cain on pedal steel and guitar (2,7), Timea Teleki on violin (6), Leonidas Kalavrouzitis on double bass and bass, Manna Knauthe on bass (5,7) and Tobias Birke on drums. Some fuzz guitars, mellotron, acoustic guitar, glockenspiel and organ form the carrying layer of rather poppy catchy English spongs, which however are sung with a much more mellow vibe compared to more mainstream genres. Just nice.

Info : http://www.zattl.de/st.stephen%20press%20kit.html
& http://www.shinygnomes.com/
or http://www.myspace.com/shinygnomes
Label : http://www.micropalrec.com/

Fit & Limo is reviewed on http://www.psychedelicfolk.com/fit_limo.html
Agoo Rec.        Au : Verbs (US,2008)****

A really interesting maturation and transformation process reshaped the band Luc into Au. The first two tracks show a first edged aspect. Here they have gone equally more crazy and more organised, just like a commune in essence can be. The tone is that of such a communal almost spiritual weirdness, with over the top overtone harmonies and a joining in pairs of singing together, with percussion, handclaps, with sections of an organised musical carnival, showing progressive moves with sequenced keyboards and groovy organ and small brass keyboard arrangements, alternated by these organised sections of vocalised enthusiasm. More arranged tracks are always alternated by calmed down tracks led by moody electric guitar and vocals with fewer harmonies. The third track for instance starts most serious with musical saw-alike and glass-alike airy tones with a background vocal drone, a harmonious tuning in into a song with moody slow electric guitar, evolving to a rhythmical breaking out with pop-rock power, fading out as fast as it appeared. The track thereafter returns to the first mood in a different shape and variation, starting with overloads of minimal piano, an introduction for the next entertaining, enthusiastic poppy handclap song, reminding me of bands like Animal Collective as well as those tralala chamberfolk bands (Mount Zion,..) a bit. The clever piano arrangements in it are almost classically inspired. A new break with new arrangements sounds like being from a circus-roundabout. This changes back quickly to the piano, with communal harmony vocals and with the handclap mode. “All myself” followed hereafter is very classical, well arranged chamber-like theatre including piano and brass with a song leading the story. The arrangements swing with a vibrating minimalist highpoint of energy, before rocking its mood further. The second calmer and moodier track with electric guitar follows hereafter, called “Two Seasons” with moody harmonious vocal leads and flute giving a slightly folkier touch, with a bit of musical saw, a slow song with front male vocals and background female vocals formed from almost droning, humming background harmonies. This seriousness and slow moodiness can be found in the last three tracks as well. The first two are led by accordion mostly, with drums nd vocals, and the second track with a trumpet solo appearing like a vocalist. The last track is the third and last song with slow electric guitar, including some slide guitar sounds too and dual vocal arrangements. Compared to the previous project, with longer tracks and more evolutions into each track this is surely an approach that should appeal with a more popular recognisable attraction. Well done.

Audio on http://social.zune.net/...
Info & audio on: http://www.myspace.com/peaofthesea & http://www.au-au-au.com/
Label info : http://www.aagoo.com/verbs/
Other reviews : http://www.prefixmag.com/reviews/au/verbs/19325/
& http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/node/137689
& http://tinymixtapes.com/article6659
& http://www.kevchino.com/review/au/verbs/1532
& http://soundsxp.com/artman2/publish/albums/Au_Verbs.shtml
& http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/au-verbs
& http://www.exclaim.ca/musicreviews/generalreview.aspx?csid1=123&csid2=850&fid1=31927
& http://www.indieville.com/reviews/aug08/au.htm
Interview : http://www.lostateminor.com/2008/10/08/aus-verbs/
Pyramid        Vuk : The Plains (FIN/US,2009)****'

Much more than a song album, this is an incredibly arranged masterpiece of a song album, bringing forward the idea as if a whole orchestra and singers are gathered to make some theatrical, almost operatic stage song-theatre possible. Vuk herself plays a lot of instruments, and arranged whole choirs of backing vocals, but she also got help of 9 musicians on guitar and different brass instruments. -(live she performs alone on pump organ and with her band, mostly a trio-). Immediately strong on the first track, this one reveals a background choir of vocal arrangements as if participating in an exotic big crowd 40s-50s movie, sung with a rich descriptive emotionality and a wide vocal range, and with full drama, while a theremin sound lies between the atmosphere of an orchestra and the sound of a voice. Here she sounds pretty much like Faun Fables, revealing with a stage appearance a world to describe with full colour images in different stage lights. The vocal arrangements are never the same, and show often different polyphonic qualities in the arrangements, are soulful and still song telling. As rhythms we hear handclaps and drums, or kalimba and piano and such, while accordion adds melodramatic sadness. Besides organ we also hear great brass arrangements enriching the drama (once a bit different with English horn and oboe). Fans of Faun Fables or some other theatre stage related female vocalist that takes care of the band arrangements, and also others, will love this for sure.

Audio and info : http://www.myspace.com/vukmusic
Label : http://www.pyramid.fi
Info : http://www.markslists.net/music/vuk/index.html
& http://www.nextbigthing.fi/artists/vuk.html
Interview : http://www.finpop.net/music/vuk.php
Other reviews : -
Fire Rec.        Matthew Bayot : Circling Buzzards (US,2009)***'

I discovered one of the Matthew Bayot’s releases in a music-store sell-out (how many music stores will survive much longer?). When hearing this album I wish I had tried the others too. I have heard comparable songs before in semi-Eastern improvised style, especially in the 60s (John Renbourne, Richard Thompson,..) but this is a whole album full of such songs. The effect is that of the semi-eastern psychedelia, even when sitar is absent. The style leans to indie(/folkrock/bluesy/new Americana/psychrock)-pop but so much into the rhythmic trance and guitar picking the instrumental is always running ahead/faster.  On “Sore Dumb” we hear a little beat of also faster running electronic beats to it, with trance effect. At least one track is much more a sitar instrumental with tabla in a rather classical Indian style. Matthew had studied classical Indian music with Ustad Imrat Khan for seven years. A nice well hung together enjoyable debut, but I still wonder where else it could lead to.

Other reviews: (with audio) : http://www.dotshop.se/...
& http://www.terrascope.co.uk/Reviews/Rumbles_April05.htm
& http://www.melodic.net/reviewsOne.asp?revnr=3428
& http://www.soundsxp.com/2043.shtml
Description : http://www.redeyeusa.com/artist/10038/albums/
Label info : http://www.firerecords.com/site/index.php?page=artists&artistid=00000000096
with audio on http://www.firerecords.com/site/index.php?page=release&releaseid=00000000323
private      Out Like Lambs : -EP- (US,2009)****

It was not easy for me to get a grip on the songs themselves. I can only say they are greatly driven emotionally, in a hug-me, lovely, slightly nostalgic way, sung by lead voice (male or female) and a whole group of people singing like one big family. The arrangements' cradlerhythm with an acoustic fundament of a lot of instrumements following and improvising on this rhythmic warmth (acoustic guitar, harp, trumpet, drums, accordion, violin...). Out like Lambs is just a duo but 17 !! more people helped along. The songs melt beautifully into one another but not one part sounds repeated. The emotions are stretched into the arrangements. Really wonderful ! Recommended indiefolk.

Info & audio : http://www.myspace.com/outlikelambs
Videos on http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RgnhKhtLptA
Homepage : http://outlikelambs.com/
Other review (with audio) : http://breadnbutterblog.com/2009/08/out-like-lambs.html