This time of year is a great time to catch up on those artists that we’ve never quite found the time to cover. We can make some headway into the thousands of unread emails and it’s a good time to return to The Recommender’s (in-)famous ‘queue’. It’s a lengthy list that never fully empties, currently now standing at over 30 artists. This uncertain limbo is a kind of demilitarized zone that we’ve created so we can store and log all those artists the second we uncover them, so they’re never forgotten, whilst maintaining the full intention of returning to them for a spot of Recommender scrutiny when we eventually get a chance. Sadly, it means it can sometimes take a few weeks for an artist to reach the front and even worse some artists are pulled out during a switch of mind, which is especially possible when we return to pay them our second attention. As much as it seems a Siberian wasteland, we think that it’s also a useful and fair filter, and quite frankly, until we come up with a better system, it’s all we’ve got.
Foxes whipped around the blogs in November, but has deservedly now risen to the top of our queue. We’re pretty sure that you’re going to absolutely love her. Getting into that queue is hard enough, let alone surviving the second taste. Londoner, Loui Rose Allen, (some names seem all set for nothing but stardom don’t they), is a solo female singer with sackfuls of that one key and essential ingredient – talent. You will entirely understand this talent within just a moment or two of hearing her sing. Comparisons to Adele, complete with husky inflections that seem to only come from being a smoker included, as well as to Ellie Goulding, minus the dull undertones, have paraded around, but we think that there’s more to Foxes. The 22-year old delivers melodic pop songs as deadly as any you’ve heard this year.
Her lead single, Youth, is due to be released on Neon Gold Records early in 2012 and it combines the lethal concoction of left-field pop with sweet, soft melodies, so it should have the housewives clicking their iTunes accounts en masse. It’s this style of ballad pop, with a beautiful voice leading you over the hot coals of a theatrical beat, that sounds like a thousand drummers are on stage behind her, that swell the tune up to it’s massive size. It’s an absolute cracker of a lead single that marries broad appeal with effortless talent in a song that will have larger record company execs falling in love with her. She also looks stunning, in a quirky and cute way. She’s even got a tumblr-style website with personal home photographs of her excitedly receiving a delivery of her ‘fox onesie’ – a ridiculously garish all-in-one garment complete with toy fox hoodie. Remind anyone of a certain Marina Diamondis? Anyone? Anyone?
Sickly-cute, with teen-girl-in-her-bedroom appeal aside, there’s also bit of a twist. This is evidenced in the other song that’s been made available to date, Home. It begins with Foxes voice holding the entire tune for the first thirty seconds, before a slowed beat arrives. And boy can she hold a tune together on her own. Her voice is a remarkable, arresting, stop-everything talent. She almost doesn’t need any instruments behind her. It really is a stand-alone skill that deserves all the limelight her label can muster. However, at approximately 1 minute and 42 seconds into the tune the bassline arrives. It’s dark and heavy. Very heavy. Surprisingly heavy in fact. And it’s this blacker edge that we would like to hear more of. It’s slightly scary and lends a matured, adult element to what could otherwise be dismissed as another Ellie Goulding teen sensation. We wait to see if they develop this darker side with future tunes. For now you can hear both tunes below, but after hearing Home it’s her next step that is clearly going to be huge. More like this and 2012 might well belong to Foxes. (MB)
FOXES – YOUTH











































































