Top Tracks: Fiona-Lee – Nothing Compares To Nineteen

It’s said that everyone you meet is fighting a battle you know nothing about – and all too often, it remains unknown. We struggle to find the words to describe what we’re feeling, are afraid to risk letting our defences down in the hope of finding a sympathetic ear, and wonder if anyone will truly understand the pain we’re feeling. Drawing a line between a conversation with her father about how “boys didn’t talk about feelings“, and the loss of a dear friend who took his own life, Fiona-Lee resolves to be open with her own struggles with anxiety and depression on her new single ‘Nothing Compares To Nineteen’. The track feels like a much needed and welcome push towards asking for help when you need it, rather than suffering in silence. Fiona’s frank and insightful lyricism manages to walk the line between being as intimate and confessional as a diary entry, while at the same time as real and down-to-earth as a conversation with a friend. All that is paired with emphatic drums and light breezy guitar work that spirals ever faster, ensuring her battles ring out loud and clear, and building more of that anthemic Sam Fender-esque sound that we’ve come to know and love.

Half The World Awaits: Why the way we buy tickets need to change

I write this as I finally admit defeat, having spent – I’ve lost count of how many hours – trying to secure tickets for the big Oasis reunion tour. Half a day was spent queueing up for the opportunity to join the actual queue, and any progress made once reaching the front of it was frustratingly fleeting. It’s been a whistle-stop tour of Ticketmaster’s various error screens, from being suspended as a bot and having the whole site crash under the weight of overwhelming demand, to having to queue up all over again only to find prices had doubled for the few remaining tickets. At least something happened on Ticketmaster I suppose; that’s more than can be said for See Tickets and Gigs And Tours, whose sites didn’t even attempt to sell any actual tickets. I’m far from the only one left empty handed. It seems like half the country spent their day chasing tickets which proved to be rare as hen’s teeth. Yet at this moment the disappointment of missing out feels dwarfed by my frustration at the appalling rigmarole of Ticketmaster’s shambolic sale. Continue reading

Top Tracks: Sixten – Atlantic

The heart wants what it wants, and sometimes our efforts to quash our feelings only ends up fanning the flames even further. We think that cutting someone out of our lives is a sure way to move on, but sometimes absence merely makes the heart grow fonder. With their new single ‘Atlantic’, Swedish sibling duo Sixten explore how long distances can often serve to amplify the longing of unrequited love. Taken from their sophomore EP Misemotional, the track’s nostalgic swells threaten to sweep you away, much the same way as when your thoughts turn to someone you thought you were finally over (“You’d think I learn my lesson, It’s been a year or two, But all of my obsessions, They’re pointing straight at you“). Throwing distance into the mix before resolving your feeling for someone just adds a world of new questions into the ether. Beyond all the same ‘what-ifs’ you keep replaying, imagining a scenario where it all worked out, you now also have to contend with the dizzying notion of the life they’re building without you in it. ‘Atlantic’ feels like a longing for closure that keeps slipping further away; how much harder it is to tie up loose ends when they stretch across oceans.

Top Tracks: Deliriously Serious – Time

While great music can come from anywhere, certain styles seem to attract specific kinds of greatness. The best drummers play jazz, the best bassists play funk, that kind of thing. If it’s great vocals you’re looking for however, my money is on soul. Sure, there’ll be plenty better singers out there on a technical level in other fields. Belting out higher notes, hitting wider ranges with more consistency and clarity. But music, like all art forms, ultimately comes down to expression. A great soul performance just channels a raging river of feeling into every note. Joy burns like a fever, sorrow cuts like a knife. It’s not about perfection, it’s about pouring every fibre of your being into each word as though you’re pleading for salvation at the pearly gates. I can’t quite recall the last time a vocal performance grabbed me the way ‘Time’ does. Christopher Escarega here captures the helplessness of feeling the years rushing by you as you fight against the current with fervent intensity. What’s more – great guitarists play the blues – and just as that stunning voice has drawn you in, a bewitching bluesy solo flares into life, burning with every bit as much passion and feeling. No matter how quickly time feels as though it’s slipping through your fingers, I promise this song is worth a moment of yours.

Top Tracks: Sparxsea – Daylight

Life is too short to not allow ourselves to feel as deeply as possible. Why restrain what’s in your heart when you can bask in the inherent beauty of the world around you, and surround yourself with others who do the same. It’s all too easy to become guarded and jaded these days, but imagine if we all had the courage to tell the people who inspire us, comfort us, and make our lives brighter exactly how much knowing them has enriched our time on this Earth. We see the best in others that they may not see in themselves, what a waste to leave it unspoken. Beneath the rock solid rhythm section and bright jangle pop melodies of Sparxsea’s ‘Daylight’, lies just such a reassuring confession of faith and appreciation. The sentiment behind its radiant chorus (“I see a daylight burning bright in you, and rays full of golden truth, seeding creation in my heart“) embodies the spirit of what we all long to hear from another, yet are too scared to offer in turn. Between the sense of community and solidarity being fostered, and the fact that the track’s proceeds are raising money for Ever After Mustang Rescue horse charity, it’s hard not to be moved by the love and compassion poured into this project.

Top Tracks: Francesca Louise – Waiting For You

We all need a little push once in a while. Someone to spur us on to take the leap when presented with new challenges and opportunities. As heartening as it is to have people in our lives who embolden us to be better and step out of our comfort zone, often the only encouraging voice at hand when we need one is our own. It’s all too easy to dismiss that inner voice as a hypocrite; the one that built the comfort zone you’re so scared to step out of in the first place, the one most afraid of failure. Yet take a moment to trust in yourself and you’ll find no one more understanding of where you’re at, of what you’re capable of, and of what it would mean to succeed. ‘Waiting For You’, the gorgeous new single from Belwood favourite Francesca Louise, plays as an encouraging reminder to herself to take the plunge into the unknown. Fittingly Francesca’s vocals sound more comforting and assured than ever, and clips of her own travels and adventures featured in the charming lyric video echo the promise of brighter days ahead. The warm folk arrangement shimmers like golden hour sun on rippling water, before building towards a triumphant, uplifting finale that feels like feeling that same sun warm your skin as you begin truly believing your own encouraging words.

Top Tracks: Ren Lawton – Charlotte

Sometimes the best creative breakthroughs are born through approaching your art from a different angle. A fresh perspective works wonders, and occasionally the best way to find one is by adding constraints to a project and treating its creation as a puzzle to be solved. The charming folk of ‘Charlotte’, the latest single from Belwood favourite Ren Lawton, is the product of just such a creative conundrum. It’s the first track from an upcoming EP Harry’s Poems (from the loft), out 23rd September, which sees him interpret the work of his uncle Harry Owen, inaugural Poet Laureate for Cheshire. Not all poetry lends itself to musicality, nor can a lot of songs claim to be truly poetic. Exploring where the overlap lies, playing Elton to his uncle’s Bernie Taupin, and finding inspiration in another medium, has clearly worked wonders for Ren’s creative spirit, if the entrancing fingerpicking and serene melodies he lends to ‘Charlotte’ are anything to go by.

Spotlight!: The Bedside Morale

Still life is always in motion. Every photo is but a single frame in the movie that is our lives. Time is always marching on; cracks form, dust gathers, and slowly but surely we get a little older and wiser. Even the most unremarkable days, the most mundane slices of life, all add up to something in the end. Either we grow accustomed to the life we’re living – learn to live with our pain, look past our doubts, and begin to appreciate the little things we took for granted. Or it all adds up like the straw that broke the camel’s back, forcing us to face facts and make a change when it finally dawns on us that there’s a better way to spend our days. No matter how still, how stuck in a rut, our lives seem, there’s always progress being made. The hands of the clock are still turning even if you can’t always see them moving. With their debut EP Still Life, Bristol quartet The Bedside Morale offer slices of love, pain and self-reflection at various stages along the journey. Continue reading