Wednesday, 2 July 2025

MIKE DAVIES COLUMN JULY 2025



Editors frontman TOM SMITH  makes his solo debut with Lights Of New York City (Play It Again Sam) which, opening and closing with a greasy late night, neon-washed sax, is a slow-paced introspective ballad recalling “Losing ourselves in the East side cliff/

Caramel sunset nothing to care/Falling into fairground, sugar on the air” and a lament for the fleetingness of youth (“I wanna run those hotel corridors again/That spill out to a skyline, bloated by the rain/A cold night air meets steam from a train/Hear them gone, just a subway train/Speaking your name…it's such a pity/We can't meet again when we were young/It's right there in your hand, and then it's gone”).


Produced by and featuring Dan Whitehouse and Peter Millson with Harriet Harkum on backing vocals, Wolverhampton’s ANGELLA CORRINA releases her second EP, Nature’s End, the jaunty, poppily acoustic  title track inspired by a 2025-set dystopian 1986 novel by  Whitley Strieber and James Kunetka that proved remarkably prophetic in its narrative of ecological disasters, poverty, hunger, society collapse and the extremes of politics, the track concluding that “the elite shall inherit the earth”.

The thinly veiled sarcasm of Safe Brown Token draws on her personal experiences while working as a ‘diversity hire’, expected to be   a model employee and not  challenge the discrimination she encountered, the chorus with its rallying cry to  ‘sing our songs’ and ‘dance our dances’, inspired by both Diversity’s dance performance about the death of George Floyd  and the resulting flood of complaints and Billie Holiday classic protest song Strange Fruit.

Personal experience also informs the echoey keyboards-backed The Assimilation Game which relates how, as an ethnic minority employee unsure of her own identity, workplace bullying and racism had a devastating effect on her mental health as she fought to find her authentic self. Strummed on guitar, Propaganda & Conspiracy Theories looks back to the COVID pandemic and how some people were ready to follow whatever regulations the government drew up without question while others were up in arms about the idea of wearing masks and social distancing, and the inevitable conspiracy theories that ensued;  basically, it’s about assessing the evidence and making up your own mind. Finally, there’s A Song For Humanity, a recognition of  the primal urge to come together through the unity of song and music as a way to understand others and ourselves and become one voice in a time of division.


John Napier wears a variety of musical hats, a folksy singer-songwriter, purveyor of Italo Disco as Real Velour and, sporting Kneecap-like balaclavas,  alongside bassist Andy Kearney and drummer Olly Forrester,  one third of New Wave outfit  THE LINE MANAGERS. The trio’s new EP, The New Normality, is a cocktail of PiL, The Clash, The Pistols and Big Special, the echoing, chimed guitar, slow, spoken title track (“resignation disguised as optimism”) getting things going,   followed by a new wave rework his previously folksy Not Your Enemy. There’s a similar thundering propulsive drums and scratchy guitars urgency to the staccato  Kings, a studio version of a Claptrap live track released in January, with its world turned upside down lyric (“It's not our fault the culture changed/No one told us no one explained/We weren't ready to live this way/Some say we got what we deserved/Others told us it could be worse/But indifference is what really hurts”), ending with a live version of the Big Special-like bench-pressing drums, snarly guitar and spat out spoken vocals of This Is Not A Showcase. They fully deserve to follow in Hickling and  Moloney’s footsteps into  national recognition.


From Lichfield, JAYLER are a blues rock quartet of 19-year-olds with a clear hard-on for  Zeppelin, right down to frontman James Bartholomew’s hair and trousers and  Tyler Arrowsmith’s Page guitar licks and posturings. They do it well, however, and new single Riverboat Queen, recorded at Vada Studios in Birmingham, is a solid 70s riff belter complete with obligatory guitar solo breakdown. With an EP already under their belt, hopefully a debut album should be along sometime next year.


 


In 2018, AMIT DATTANI, acclaimed for his fingerpicking guitar work, was diagnosed with a degenerative nerve condition and the prognosis that at best he had  two more years of playing guitar before his hands would no longer cooperate. He refused to be defined by his condition. Seven years and much perseverance later,  armed with a custom-built guitar and an adaptation in his playing style, he returns in splendid vocal form with ‘Wrong Kind Of One’, the sprightly and intricately fingerpicked (showcased on a lengthy play-out) title track of his forthcoming album, which, with a melody that I suspect deliberately recalls ‘Will The Circle Be Unbroken’, addresses refugees who have had to make terrible sacrifices and journeys to escape violence, hardship, war and destruction (“Where’s my home now, dust and rubble”) , only to find themselves  dehumanised, left aside and mistreated (“they say I’m, I’m unwelcome, and they turn out all the lights…I will stay here, in the shadows/I’m the wrong kind of one”)  in the lands where they sought refuge.

Monday, 2 June 2025

MIKE DAVIES COLUMN JUNE 2025

 



Having reviewed tracks by former Quads members Josh and Terry (Johnny) Jones, I’m completing the siblings set by drawing your attention to lead guitarist
COLIN (Jack) JONES who has several numbers up on YouTube (www.youtube.com/@colinjones9700).  As If (You Can) is a midtempo West Coastish ballad with a lilting melody, I Think I’ve Learnt My Lesson a more driving rock number with his distinctive chiming guitar making its presence felt while the climate change themed  Scared! is a moodier slow chug with samples from two Greta Thumberg speeches. The Quads have become something of a cult, but the three brothers deserve to be also feted for their current music too.


Celebrating the first anniversary of his The Promise Of Spring breakthrough album, GEORGE BOOMSMA has now released The Promise Of Spring Live recorded at two shows at the  Green Note and The Regal Theatre in Tenbury Wells backed by Will Looms and electric guitar, bassist Bart Debney Davies  and drummer Ally McDougal to bring a much fuller (listen to the percussive textures of Open Curtain) and at times, as on Johnny Walker Guy, rocking out sound.  As well as all the songs from the album (How High The Mountain having been revisited from his self-titled 2016 album) save for Fallen, there’s also live recordings of two others,  the ironic Streets Paved With Gold from 2017’s sophomore  Do Something With The Night and the twangy chugging autobiographical My 60s Weekend, a brand new number that lays the ground for where the next album’s direction might lie. His musical development over the albums comparable to that of Chris Cleverley, his standing should follow a similar path.


Monday, 5 May 2025

MIKE DAVIES COLUMN MAY 2025



Longtime followers of the Brum music scene will have fond memories of THE QUADS, formed by brothers Josh, Jack (Colin) and drummer Johnny (Terry Jones) with bassist Jim Doherty,  whose 1979 Big Bear debut single There Must Be Thousands’ became a Peel favourite (he declared it his single of the decade) and a minor hit, reaching 66. Sadly, none of the subsequent releases fared as well, but they were all impressive and distinctive New Wave numbers, especially characterized by the unique echoey guitar sound of  ‘Jack’ Jones the likes of which I’ve never hear since.

After four further singles, they eventually called it a day in the mid 80s following Doherty’s departure, briefly reforming in the 90s and recording a  series of tracks for Don Arden that were never released.

However, I learn they are in fact actually available via  Bandcamp (https://joshjonesnz.bandcamp.com/album/the-quads-ep) where they surfaced in 2019 as The Quads EP, four tracks that open with the hazy ballad It Will Be Alright that builds to a slightly psychedelic feel. The spacey narcotic Feel The Need For More follows along with the equally cosmic almost proto Stone Roses vibe of  the instrumental  Radically Free and finally the similarly inclined fuzz and feedback Night Into Day.


They’re posted via Josh’s New Zealand site where he now lives in Auckland  as an Anglican priest in which capacity he’s released Songs Of Grace, Hope & Lament which, as you might imagine, are deeply rooted in his beliefs and faith and that, however we understand the concept of  'God',  most   have a sense of the sacred and the divine.  There’s six tracks, built around guitar, drums and keyboards and ample evidence that his voice has lost none of its character or power and he can still knock out an infectious melody.  This Is The Day is a celebration of Christ’s birth,  with the strummed and simply picked Let Your Kingdom Be and its call for a better world,  the softly puttering bluesy folk Lord, Giver Of This Day while piano ballad I Am In Christ is pretty much a self-explanatory devotion.

Featuring violin and delicately played acoustic guitar and understated drums, Salt is a stunning near six-minute, slowly building epic while it closes with the anthemic, guitar chiming and very Quads-like (and early Psychedelic Furs) Lost In Awe And Wonder that should take hold of your whatever your faith may be.


What prompted these discovers was reconnecting with Terry John Jones who now lives in Stratford, where for six years  he served as a Town Host at the Stratford Business Improvement District  supporting local busker, and is now reviving his own music career. Last year he released the acoustic ballad You Are The Love Of My Life featuring Torie Rushton  on cello and Gracie Shepherd on violin,  and follows up now with You Don’t Believe that, as Josh has observed, while a new song, might have written a whole different story for The Quads had it been the follow up to Thousands. 

It’s about time the band were accorded the respect and audiences they’ve always deserved and perhaps Terry’s re-emergence might just be a spark that lights the flame. Now, what’s Jack up to?

 

Friday, 4 April 2025

MIKE DAVIES COLUMN APRIL 2025



Two years on from Walk In Shadow, CERI JUSTICE returns with the self-released Cut Loose,  eleven tracks that, written by Justice and Paul Johnson (who plays guitar, mandolin, bass, keys and drums), and musically variously aided and abetted by guitarist  Tony Kelsey, steel player DB Smith  and   Marion Fleetwood on strings, ably showcase her voice and stylistic range, from swaggering rock to blues and country. It kicks off in twangy style with the swaggering country inflected, chorus catchy  Show Me What You’re Made Of, slowing down for the steel-stained and steady drum patterned Americana-balladry Looking For A Lover, another with dramatic big chords.

Still with country roots, Got This Feeling has a poppier feel to its tumbling chords, Fleetwood’s violin bringing mournful notes to the folksier sound of the spare, hypnotic swayer  Fragments (Jeannie’s Escape) before Just A Fever taps into her bluesier rock groove with both Kelsey’s growling electric lead guitar and angsty acoustic, heavy drums, wailing fiddle and a steady steamrollering ebb and flow rhythm.

Switching the mood, Miss U Mantra is founded on fingerpicked guitar before the electrics and heavy drums roll in and even a 60s psychedelic blues touch. Offering her quieter side, Love’s Let Me Down is an acoustic guitar, steel-stroked slow swayer that gradually builds into a soaring crescendo.


Opening with fingerpicked acoustic, bluesy country and a trace of Texas heat are the threads bringing the organ underpinned Sometimes I Wonder together before the title track brings her back to urgent blues and metal rock that melds Quatro, Raitt, Elles Bailey and Joanne Shaw-Taylor. There more big noise blues riffs and chords for the penultimate, handclapping power-burning All In My Dreams the  album ending with the near six-minute The 21st  Day, a cinematic opening sweep giving way to resonant single picked guitar note and a feverish desert blues mood to the slow, steady snaking voodoo queen rhythm before it fades away into the trembling distance. There is, though, a bonus track, an inspired slow and acoustic cover the Eddie & The Hot Rods classic Do Anything You Wanna Do. As indeed she can.  Exuding a fierce confidence to match the heat in the music, to quote the Kenny Loggins classic the title evokes, it’s time for her to tear up this town and beyond.



When not playing his trade as an acoustic contemporary folk singer-songwriter, John Napier has a parallel musical identity as  frontman for Big Special-like (with Kneecap hood) punk-rap outfit THE LINE MANAGERS alongside bassist Andy Kearney and drummer Olly Forrester,  new single The Black Post  a rant against the stagnation of post-millennial culture set to a relentless punk, garage rock groove while If' is  a spoken word call-to-arms set to angular punk funk. (www.thelinemanagers.bandcamp.com/album/the-black-post


Saturday, 1 March 2025

MIKE DAVIES COLUMN MARCH 2025



This month sees
GERRY COLVIN release Past, Present & Crescent (Crocodile), a mix of, as the title says, old, new and songs from the  2022 Crescent Theatre show by The Gerry Colvin Band (Jerome Davies, Trish Power, Lyndon Webb and Marion Fleetwood) and The Gerry Colvin Big Folk Orchestra. It’s a new one that gets the ball rolling with Click Club Chair, a samba tinged la la la-ing refrain number about meeting wife to be Kathy at the legendary live venue run by Dave Travis, leading into the first recording of the melancholic circular guitar chiming The Forgotten Man, a song about a singer who’s faded from the spotlight which premiered in 2022 at the Kitchen Garden CafĂ©. Striking an associated note, another new one, with dobro, twangy guitar break, fiddle and mandolin, I’m A Songwriter Me is a wryly amusing number about the contemporary process,  tackling writer’s block with a dash of plundering musical history   for inspiration and looking for that elusive hook.

Kicking up the tempo, the accordion and fiddle-propelling five-minute A Folk Melody with its musically tumbling narrative of  the genre’s journey is another brand new song as is the breezy shuffling, jazz-tinged Inconsiderate Man with an acoustic solo from Lyndon and typically sharp Colvin lyrics about self-protecting misanthropy.  The final new number, set to a slight marching beat with mandolin trills and cornet, while the word title pun rather stretches grammatical accuracy, War Feats is a clever metaphorical anti-war protest number about a soldier who loses five toes – and comrades - in battle.


One of the oldest songs, dating from the Colvin Quarmby CQV album, the jaunty countrified social commentary
  Crumbling Country Stand, about the ordinary working man upon whom the foundations are built, gets a new treatment with the band line but retaining mentions of Ikea,  Sky Sports,  Colonel Gaddaffi and Tony Blair while the final three are all culled from the Crescent Theatre spectacular.  Originally featured on Jazz Tales Of Country Folk, the bitter post-break-up  I Killed A Flower For You Today gets a rework with the  sparse, moody piano and upright bass-anchored arrangement now featuring brass and rounded out with a soulful closing vocal from Jackie Walters (formerly Jackie Clarke of Asia Blue). Finally,   there’s the fingerpicked acoustic love song delicacy of The Ocean and the eight minute plus closing audience-participation rousing   ebb and flow rhythmed Leave A Light In The Window with its brass and strings and big gospel vocals finale with Walters, Jane Pearl and Jennie Williams. This year marking the 30th anniversary of  founding ColvinQuarmby and his first recordings after the demise of Terry & Gerry, while he may be winding down the number of live shows, it’s clear his consummate genius as writer and vocalist remain undiminished, with the intriguingly titled Festina Lente Lives likely on the cards this summer.



Of Black Country roots and now ensconced in Shropshire, Mick Butler aka  SICKY continues to bang out albums that would, in another universe, be staples of the indie charts and feature regularly on mainstream rock shows. His latest is Trouble In Mind, a collection of a dozen tracks that opens with the keyboard hum of Billy Cousins before turning into a swaggering drums driven marching rhythm and distorted vocals that, an ironic track about    escapism, an imaginary superhero you can pretend to be when you find yourself doubting everything, suggests what Roger Waters might have sounded like had he got into glam.

Indeed, glam is a prevailing influence here, most notably drinking deep from the T. Rex well on several numbers, first being the Blur meets Bolan seduction song whimsy of I’m Happy If You’re Happy, his two young daughters on noises and one of three with Jen Bone on double bass,  with its line “if you’re happy I am James Dean” and continuing through such foot tapping, infectious nuggets as  Ten Minutes with Bridgnorth’s


St.Leonard’s church bells and a  20th Century Boy rockabilly urgency, the bass licks Bolan boogie of the  abandonment-themed  My Girl’s Gone  with its sample from Quatermass And The Pit, the cautionary waring of destructive habits that is Slide  and the rumbling slider  shuffle of Money For The News, a critique of modern media if you hadn’t  guessed that features the sliding doors of a Stourbridge shopping centre 

There’s nothing here over three minutes and, following the stuttering slow chug and crooning harmonies of  Life In A Jar, the next three are all under two, but it’s the quality not the width that counts on the slow, bluesy Songbird, The Hill (apparently inspired by a punishing charity walk) and the human frailty, lounge organ backed Bowie-cabaret of Mankind with niece Rebecca Butler on vocals. Calling a halt with the breathily sung and longer Just Me with an intro and chorus that sounds like Bolan taking on a Dimitri Tiomkin Western score and has a spoken passage towards the abrupt close. 

Filtering the sparkle of 70s pop with the sour of 21st century life, this is his best yet.

Monday, 3 February 2025

MIKE DAVIES COLUMN FEBRUARY 2025



While they had 10 Top 40 singles, including Blackberry Way going to No1, between 1967 and 1972, despite releasing four albums in the same period THE MOVE only ever had one Top 75 album, their self-titled debut which peaked at No 15.

Quite why they never caught the album-buying public’s interest is a mystery, but seems likely to have been the disconnect between the pop sound of the singes and the more aggressive heavy rock they favoured for the albums, the debut being the only one to include any big hits, though 1970s Looking On did feature Brontosaurus.

Their final album was Message From The Country, recorded due to a contractual obligation with EMI, with most of the band focused on the debut Electric Light Orchestra album. It’s now been issued in an extended edition by Cherry Red, or more strictly reissued and remastered from 2005 which piles on the final singles Tonight, Chinatown (and California Man and B-sides Down On The Bay and Do Ya (a great crunchy rocker with a The Beach Boys break that was the A side in America and subsequently a hit for ELO) alongside alternate versions of the latter, Don’t Mess Me Up, The Words of Aaron and My Marge.

Given nobody’s heart was really in it and musical styles were all over the place (see Presley pastiche Don’t Mess Me Up, a precursor to Eddie and the Falcons perhaps, and Johnny Cash parody Ben Crawley Steel Company, both sung by Bev Bevan) , numbers like the title track,  the muscular boogie Ella James (ELO orchestra rock evident, the experimental psychedelic chamber folk  No Time with Roy Wood on recorder and  the surely Pepper-era Lennon-influenced Words Of Aaron are more than simply filler and deserve a full reassessment. The reissue also comes with new, detailed liner notes by Mike Barnes.



While I suspect it’s unlikely to prove representative of the forthcoming The Awful Truth album (“a modern mutant music hall interpretation of the day’s news, a haunting jolt into realism narrated with all the angst of an insistent, slightly dishevelled late-night newscaster”), THE NIGHTINGALES are at their most immediate and accessible with The New Emperor’s New Clothes, a crank it up loud, driving rock n roll blast of thundering drums, pounding piano and ringing guitars aptly tagged as  Velvets meet Fairport Convention in a crowded boozer.


KATHERINE PRIDDY
’s second winter-themed collaboration with Poet Laureate Simon Armitage, again written for the project, the slow swaying ‘Daybreaker’ (Cooking Vinyl) dreamily embodies the thaw after the freeze, a reemergence into the sunlight  carried by the gently rippling guitar pattern as her pure voice floats on the breeze as it builds to a swelling, keys and strings euphoria. (www.katherinepriddy.bandcamp.com/track/daybreaker)



A prelude to their third EP, Solitude, THE MISSED TREES, guitarist Joe Peacock and violinist Louisa Davies-Foley, release ‘I Am Water’. Their most immediately accessible and radio friendly track to date, it’s inspired by the story of  Manfred Gnadinger, a German hermit who dropped out and went to live on a beach in the Galician fishing village of Camelle, where he was known as Man, creating sculptures (“in splendid isolation”) out of things that washed up and living in tune with nature until an oil spill from the sunken Prestige tanker covered his sculpture garden and he died, ostensibly of a broken heart. 

Monday, 6 January 2025

MIKE DAVIES COLUMN JANUARY 2025



Released via Bandcamp towards the end of last year, EP2 is the second live in rehearsals set by ROB PETERS & THE SLAPDASH COWBOYS, recorded in the run up to the Alive album. Kicking off with the brief strummed sway love song to his wife, This Is Love, it gives way to the surging drive of  Jesus In The Parking Lot with its punchy drums and dirty electric guitar, slowing down again for  the sparsely accompanied Alive from The Moon That Thought It Was The Sun. It ends with the eight minute Finger Rain, originally from A Copper Heart, with its psychedelic swirl and George Harrison nods. A third is due later this year.



A taster for his upcoming Troubled Delight album, SICKY aka Mick Butler releases  I’m Happy If You’re Happy, a jaunty, upbeat little number about  seducing someone’s heart, which, Jen Bone on  double bass, scuffed percussion, a broken violin,  ukulele, glockenspiels, bells, drums,   mouth organ, random noises and backing vocals from daughters Lily and Scarlet, has the lazy purring feel of  vintage Britpop and most definitely has the effect the title suggests.



Looking ahead, having not released anything since 2023’s sonically experimental Dissolution II, KATY ROSE BENNETT is working towards a new album featuring settings of poems by  Scottish poet  Donna Ashworth, terrific early unaccompanied  tasters of which can be heard on the YouTube videos  for When I’m No Longer Here (www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1051695302724019)  and The Stars Called You Home (www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6MuAnRBeXg)

MIKE DAVIES COLUMN JULY 2025

Editors frontman TOM SMITH   makes his solo debut with Lights Of New York City (Play It Again Sam) which, opening and closing with a greasy ...