Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Northern Portrait. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Northern Portrait. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 9 de enero de 2013

Northern Portrait: Pretty decent swimmers (Ep, 2013)

Pues bien, Pretty Decent Swimmers ya está aquí. Se trata de la primera referencia de Matinée Recordings en este 2013,y el debut no podía ser más esperanzador. Una auténtica bocanada de aire fresco para este año que se presenta difícil, aunque esperanzador. Algo así a la sensación que desprende Pretty decent Swimmers, un estallido del mejor Jangle-Pop interpretado a la manera nórdica: guitarras cristalinas, letras animosas, voces en un plano destacado, estribillos y versos de chicle, y por supuesto, ese característico sello Smithiano que inunda todo el sonido de este disco que se nos antoja demasiado corto, porque nos quedamos con ganas de mucho mucho más. Un disco absolutamente contagioso y lleno de ese sentimiento tan simple como vital: la belleza.

 “The band debuted in 2008 with two very well received EPs—‘The Fallen Aristocracy’ and ‘Napoleon Sweetheart’—both of which sold out almost instantly upon release. The band’s consummate debut album ‘Criminal Art Lovers’ enjoyed widespread international acclaim in 2010 including numerous appearances on year-end favorite lists, and the ‘Life Returns To Normal’ 7” single on elegant clear vinyl was released later that same year. Northern Portrait has charmed live audiences in Denmark, England, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and USA over the years, including performances at the prestigious Indietracks Festival and popfests in Copenhagen, Limoges, Madrid and San Francisco. The fantastic new ‘Pretty Decent Swimmers’ EP is available on deluxe 10” color vinyl and digital formats, and features the first new recordings from the band in over two years. Lead track ‘Happy Nice Day’ is three and a half minutes of straightforward power pop inspired by Swedish pop idols The Wannadies. It is an ode to the joys of traveling and casual meetings in hotels, airports and pen friend sections from Tokyo to Stockholm to Hamburg to Nice and beyond. Meanwhile, ‘Greetings From Paris’ explores the difficulty in admitting when reality doesn’t exactly match expectations and ambitions. It’s a superb slice of Nordic guitar pop that builds to an especially melodic conclusion. Side two opens with the playful and jaunty ‘Bon Voyage!’, a song about short term holiday attractions gone wrong … but with a slight twist. Musically sunny and shimmering, the song is a guitar driven sunbath and pool dive all in one. Bon voyage indeed! Powerful and jangly, closing track ‘I Feel Even Better’ is an escapist’s dream come true. Lyrical elements from the Cheers theme song in reverse accentuate the desire to get away, while autoharp and 12-string guitar add a bright sparkle to the general bounciness of the song. ‘Pretty Decent Swimmers’ is pressed on transparent swimming pool blue vinyl and limited to 1000 hand-numbered copies in a luxurious sleeve featuring fashionable Los Angeles water ballet troupe Aqualillies on the cover. A very welcome return for one of the most esteemed bands in indie music today” (Matinée Recordings)

jueves, 27 de diciembre de 2012

Northern Portrait: Happy nice day (Single, 2013)

"Swedish indie gods The Wannadies are largely forgotten about these days, with the only real memory being the omnipresent 'You & Me Song', which was nice enough but far to overplayed too evoke any positive reaction anymore, plus it was far from their best song (try 'How Does It Feel?', 'Hit' or 'Might Be Stars' if you're unfamiliar). So it's great to see them getting a name-check as one of the main inspirations behind the new material from Danish indiepoppers Northern Portrait who have a new EP titled 'Pretty Decent Swimmers' scheduled for January 8th on Matinee Recordings. Single 'Happy Nice Day' does indeed have a similar feel to The Wannadies in its guitar-pop-with-the-emphasis-on-pop mannerisms. Catchy chorus, nothing too taxing or overly "alternative" and simple construction with melody at its centre. It can be repetitive hearing so many references to C86 in reviews of releases of this kind, so another bonus here is that, while it may be jangly guitar-pop, it's the 1990s that spring more immediately to mind than the scratchier, rougher DIY indie of the decade before. 'Pretty Decent Swimmers' = pretty decent EP" (soundsxp.com)