COASTAL CITIES

We simply cannot consider what Foals, or Bloc Party, or The Libertines would have sounded like if they weren’t from the UK. It’s just impossible to imagine isn’t it? Totally impossible. There’s something especially British about them. You can say the same thing for lots of bands through history. The Smiths simply couldn’t come from San Francisco could they? What about The Specials, or Metronomy, or Roni Size, or Radiohead? No chance, they’re all very, very British. However, they also sound very different from each other, so you can’t tie a theme together. It seems that there’s no British theme. It’s most likely a reflection of the variety of cultures and differing cities and landscapes found upon our small island. If nothing else, we’re a diverse bunch.

So we turn our attention to today’s recommendation and once again we hear a sound that could only have been created within our borders. Coastal Cities are a relatively new five-piece who plan to release their debut EP, Think Tank, on December 5th. They come from High Wycombe and we can only assume that the moniker they’ve selected perhaps reflects the dreamers they appear to be, as their home is very much a town, not a city, that’s landlocked and in no way coastal. Perhaps it’s that ‘High Wycombe’ simply isn’t a suitable band name; it’s certainly not quite as catchy is it? Either way, the teenage group – they’re all said to be under 20 years old – deliver some rather brilliant and enticing music that will see their appeal stretch out far beyond their town’s borders and who knows in this online world, perhaps beyond the UK’s edges too.

The likes of the influential Neon Gold music blog, the New york band, The Drums, and even some French music commentators, such as Les Inrockuptibles and Le Figaro picked up on them before any UK blogs, eventually resulting in them playing a gig in Paris before they’d even performed in their own capital. It seems the foreign obsession with UK-produced music is sometimes paying more attention than those of us who call Britain home! We’ve been informed that they found their local scene’s cliques uninviting, which only served their desire to escape the suffocation that an unacceptable community can create – is their anything worse than an uncomfortable home life? As we see on this debut EP this is a band that have now found the air their creativity needed in order to breathe.

Comparisons to early Foals will inevitably bounce around, as they deliver the same post-punk-inspired ingredients, with not only the spiked guitars, but Declan Curran’s vocals, sung with his English accent intact, that undoubtedly refelect Yannis‘ yelps. Opening track on the EP and the first to get them the early online coverage, Think Tank, begins with Sean Semmons’ guitars dancing up the neck. Notes are played independently of each other, as rapid bass rolls and light, sprinting beats are introduced at a relentless pace, only to pause mid-song for what feels like a breather, before racing to the finish line. It’s as light-footed as a centipede walking up the fret board, but youthful and bright. The only negative is that all the light they’ve successfully stored up seems to be somewhat dulled by it’s lack of originality. This is very Foals. The genre of math rock was a hit a few years ago, but now it’s lost it’s ingenuity, hence the gear shift on the last Foals album. However, when it’s this good, it’s still impressive and they may yet learn to evolve it like Two Door Cinema Club did so successfully in more recent times.

The lyrics are also a bit of a square wheel – we’ve no still idea what a ‘think tank’ is – but the stories of love give a heart to this otherwise spiked music. No Rooms For Heroes sings, “It’s your heart that makes me feel, it’s your heart that makes me real“, which feels a little teenage, but on other tunes you get healthier signs. Night School isn’t just utterly brilliant, with what sounds like a million notes all folding in upon themselves in an impossibly great set of riffs, but we get Declan repeating the line “We can learn to handle each other“, which could just as much be speaking to the listener, as their journey is ultimately an enjoyable one by the EP’s end. Two instrumental tunes Transgression, which continues the signature math rock breathlessness, in the same way Not Squares burst with pogo-ing energy is a delight, whilst Infinite Mind shows a mature beauty that can only be found when you take your time.

The world evolves at an ever increasing pace and it’s virtually impossible to keep up, so we can’t suggest that math rock is still particularly current, neither has it been so long since it’s hey day to consider re-visiting it. However, when you remove the judgemental goggles of time and relevance what we actually have here is a set of young creative artists that have produced an EP of such skillful design that it simply cannot be ignored. The new demos are just as breezy too, with Relief proving a particularly tall spire, so the career they’re building seems set on solid foundations and it’s not your starting point, but the path you set out on that will ultimately decide your destination. Nobody else but us Brits can make this style of music and this band are a particular highlight among the many pretenders. In a global community, where the traditional industries have all but left Britain in search of cheaper foreign labour, it’s good to see that the UK is still the manufacturing capital of the world when it comes to this style of indie. (MB)

COASTAL CITIES – NIGHT SCHOOL

COASTAL CITIES – INFINITE MIND

SATELLITE STORIES

If you want an example of what the Internet can do for music, then you need look no further than this quartet from the arctic city of Oulu in Finland. We can’t imagine an indie band would get noticed this early in their careers from a city as remote as that were we back in 1974! We know that you’ve never heard of Oulu, but with the Internet that doesn’t matter anymore. In fact, does the Internet make geography entirely irrelevant these days?

Not only are they from a distant cold corner of Finland, but they jam out a style of racket-indie-pop that’s so perfectly designed for the UK market, nestling their inspirations somewhere between Two Door Cinema Club and The Wombats. We’d like to warn them that they’re in danger of sounding a little too ‘last decade’ if they soak up more of the latter, although thankfully, on the evidence to date, it’s more a lot more Two Door. In fact, if the float any closer to the Northern Irish band’s sound they’re in danger of people assuming they’re one and the same – just one listen to their track, Helsinki Art Scene, and it’s hard to get Two Door’s image out of your mind!

Their homeland blurs further into the background upon hearing the voice of the lead singer, Esa. He doesn’t just sing in English, but he’s virtually got a northern accent. It’s almost weird and had us double checking that this whole Finland story wasn’t in fact some Nordic joke. Add his vocals to the straight up bang/crash indie pop backing and you wonder if there’s any Finish ingredients at all.

It’s not a massive issue and shouldn’t stand in the way of success, particularly in the UK. Helsinki Art Scene was a blog smash last September, following their self-released debut EP. It’s a sugar-rush of a song that follows the exact same route as most other indie pop of this kind, with rapidly plucked high guitar notes and a nervous heartbeat pace. It’s as decent as it is forgetful. It’s not that they’re writing bad tunes, but more that they’re writing the exact same tunes as other bands.

They’ve just returned with their brand new single and it’s got the blog’s tongues flapping, with more of the same upbeat and bright song writing. Family is yet another tune that begins with a crash of noise, before the vocals lead you to an enjoyable guitar riff. Sadly they shoehorn in more “ooh’s” and “ahh’s” for the chorus, which may prove to be perfect for the happy-go-lucky teen market, but it also comes across as a little bit immature. Fortunately their fresh faces and young ages are perfectly suited – indeed what else would they get away with playing? Just like Two Door they’d look silly attempting Pink Floyd covers, so the new single seems to be yet another rewardingly shiny example of a band playing with their hearts and aiming them straight at the adoring teenagers, who no doubt pogo all night long at their live shows.

Overall, they have every chance of making a career out of this well-designed, positive straight-up indie pop music. They tick enough boxes to earn a label signature and we imagine that their live sets are 30 minutes of smiles and bouncing. If they can just add in something a little more original to their constructions, using their clear influences to create something fresher than their current releases. Their big problem won’t be that they’re not good enough, but that they fail to find that allusive, distinctive ingredient. Without this they’re in danger of disappearing back into the Internet from whence they came.  (MB)

SATELLITE STORIES – FAMILY

SATELLITE STORIES – HELSINKI ART SCENE