LOOSE TALK COSTS LIVES – WAX & GOLD EP

Loose Talk Costs Lives recently approached The Recommender for some extended blog inches regarding their upcoming EP, following our initial bit of coverage last summer. The Leeds four-piece asked if there was any chance of a little bit of fresh editorial, which we’re more than pleased to offer, as there’s nothing better than repeat custom is there – makes you feel like you’re doing something right, right? Right.

We were happy to oblige because the second we hit the play button on the Soundcloud link we were reminded of precisely what earned them their Recommender coverage first time around. Usually, with this kind of highly-skilled, intricate indie pop music, the people making it have to be pretty damn talented to get anywhere near this level of song writing, so any new material is bound to race confidently into your ears like a puppy that’s missed it’s owner for months.

Their debut EP, Wax & Gold, is now ready, having been produced by James Kenosha (Pulled Apart By Horses, Grammatics, Chapel Club), and is set for a release on August 8th. It’s four tracks are all impossibly gorgeous, clearly marking out their enviable talents, as they manage a difficult trick in writing music – to show off such clever songsmithery, but more importantly to do it so consistently. This EP picks you up for fifteen minutes and never lets you down.

The first track Seraphim is like opening the blinds on a bright, sunny day. It introduces you to their African-styled guitars, that feel as soft, welcoming and pretty as glitter on a beautiful girl’s face, before the combined vocals breeze in. After approximately 1 minute and 45 seconds the whole song begins to close the deal as it seduces you patiently, pausing entirely before they build it back up to something altogether more energetic than what’s gone before. The end drifts over you like a heroin overdose, all blurred and distant, as if it’s left your world entirely. It’s a cracking opener, that shows off one of their best moves – to write songs like stories, with a proper beginning, middle and end.

The satisfaction continues into Hemlock, which feels like the next chapter of the same book, as the guitars once again star, finding Oliver Route’s fingers not to so much playing the instrument as dancing along it’s neck. It’s a more confident piece, with a pace to match and a few less breaks, but it’s still magical all the same.

The third track on the EP, Calavera, shifts gears entirely and it’s a welcome re-alignment. It’s perhaps the strongest track on the mini-album, as the slower pace lets it warm up and allows the focus to move onto the voices. The guitars still dance, but they’re joined by others in a more collaborative style which is utterly irresistible. Approximately three minutes in they reach for the pause button and usher in a sweet vocal refrain that’s reminiscent of Dog Is Dead. It’s yet another tender moment in a series of considered junctions.

The final tune, Amaranth, seems like all the lessons learned from the previous three tracks brought together for a closer. It once again highlights their best features as it unfolds like the petals of a rare and beautiful flower. Tropical indie music like this has been a real feature of 2011 so far, with Real Fur, Holger and Theme Park all entering The Recommender’s ‘favourites list’ in recent months and Loose Talk Costs Lives stands as tall as any of them. It’s customers such as these that make shopkeepers like us smile broadly upon seeing them return, so we are proud to place their products straight at the centre of our shop window. (MB)

LOOSE TALK COSTS LIVES – SERAPHIM

LOOSE TALK COSTS LIVES – CALAVERA

LOOSE TALK COSTS LIVES – HEMLOCK

REAL FUR

This is our favourite new band. If you’ve never come across this East London trio then we imagine they’ll become your favourite new band too in a few minutes time. You have been warned. So delightfully irresistible and jammed with gorgeous merriment is their music that we dare you not to be dancing around your living room with a broad smile.

This is what we need in music, and it doesn’t happen nearly often enough. With Real Fur you get all sorts of influences cleverly congregating like a like a flock of well-trained pigeons ready to shit on the bands around them. Their congruous parts creating something altogether more original and interesting than their individual components.

Take the track Birds for example. You can start counting up the ingredients, as it begins with a little bit of winding, flicked guitars that The Edge or John Frusciante would be proud of, before Matt McGough’s funked basslines break it all up like a playful rugby tackle. Then Leo Duncan’s vocals come in, sounding somewhere between Jim Kerr and David Byrne. However, once the coil’s wound up to the chorus you reach a very special twist, as the voice switches up to a high pitched call, as Leo speaks to the skint millions, “every penny I spend is a penny I owe“.

They’re still at the early stages, with only a few demos floating around, but everything we’ve heard holds that magical, light touch, of the kind that wouldn’t feel out of place on Paul Simon’s Graceland. Two of the trio used to be in the band Cheka, but left to form this new outfit one year ago, playing their first show last February. They remain unsigned to date, although there is understandably a fair bit of interest – are you reading this Mr A&R man!?

We adore bands such as Foals, Two Door Cinema Club, Tanlines, Fiction and Loose Talk Costs Lives, as the seriousness is removed more and more with each new band’s arrival, until you get to Real Fur and find the fun button permanently switched on. Just like all these bands, with their Talking Heads-inspired oddities, you still find the twinkle inside the tropical guitars, with a hatful of contagious choruses and an ability to create hooks so addictive you’d think there was a Coca-Cola-inspired illegal secret ingredient.

One unusual but impossibly charming point of interest, is that Real Fur host these special events around London, called ‘Safari Funk parties‘, in everyday establishments such as launderettes. They plan to support their debut single, Animal, which is planned for a release in May, by touring launderettes around the UK, including one in Brighton. However, before all this you can watch them play our beach-side home on Thursday 24th February in support of David’s Lyre, at the more sensibly-traditional venue, The Hope.

This kind of band, with this style of adorable, intelligent music, delivered with this brilliant, energising attitude is an absolute find. What seals the deal though, is not the boundaries being pushed, or the addictive satisfaction of hitting play once more immediately after each song ends, but that in music we have something that can truly transform your mood and positively affect your spirits. It’s their ability to create smiles, as much as they create fantastic music, that we think earns them the moniker of our ‘new favourite band’.   (MB)

REAL FUR – BIRDS

REAL FUR – ANIMAL

REAL FUR – PRIDE