Saturday, November 15, 2014


Debi DossDebi Does (Own Label)

You may not recognise the name but Debi Doss but you have almost certainly heard her voice. She sang the female parts on the Buggles classic, Video Killed The Radio Star and was a backing singer for The Kinks amongst many others. These two bands feature heavily on this EP, with an acoustic, folksy version of Video Killed The Radio Star opening things, followed by two Ray Davies Songs, Waterloo Sunset and Nothing Lasts Forever. Crisp, clear vocals set the scene for both, with the well-known former the better song. The latter will not set the heather on fire but Debbie has a calming voice and the song just drifts along in the background. She also includes two of her own compositions, the French language Je Chante being the first. This is a strange one, why French? It’s pleasant enough although Eurovision is not far from the surface. She finishes with the poignant Fly High (Part 1) which was composed in tribute to her nephew who tragically drowned earlier this year.

Debi has spent a number of years in the background but this EP shows that she deserves to be out in the spotlight.


David Blue

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Chris While and Julie Matthews are back with a classy album.


Chris While and Julie MatthewsWho We Are (Fat Cat)


 

Who We Are is the ninth studio album from the former Albion Band stalwarts. It’s a combination of Folk, Country and Americana with many of the songs blending each of the three. Opening with the energetic Americana fused Folk of If This Was Your Last Day, While and Matthews remind us what it feels like to just get up there are play from your heart. Country music is a thread through the gentle Gone Girl Gone, Mad Men and That’s Not Who We Are. Songs such as the contemporary Country Get Through This Somehow and the bouncy Americana I Don’t Know confirm that they are every bit as good as their American counterparts. They’d certainly be more noticed if they were from the other side of the pond and both of these would not be out of place in The Grand Ol’ Opry and the like. Special mention for Howard Lees on electric guitar.

It’s not all Americana based however with Dancing Under The Gallows, a tribute to Alice Hertz Sommer, the oldest survivor of the Holocaust, who died earlier this year aged 111. This blend of Folk and Country is extremely thought provoking, a fitting tribute and a lovely song overall. Heaven Is Changing is another that shows them as a bridge between Folk and Country. This has gentle sounds with the piano sounding like the pitter-patter of raindrops at times. Drop Hammer is about the women who kept the steel coming in Sheffield during the World Wars. It’s a classy contemporary Folk with a small choir of Yorkshire factory girls. A Capella in the main with just a little percussion to represent the factory sounds. Another war themed song is the stirring White Feather, this being based on the White Feather movement. This will cause debates between those that hear it and I’m sure that there will be those that have strong thoughts on both sides of the fence. They close with the whimsical Under A Button Moon.

If you like Folk, Country or Americana then there’s something in here for all of you.



David Blue.