Showing posts with label Mollie Marriott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mollie Marriott. Show all posts

Friday, October 27, 2017

Mollie Marriott - Truth Is A Wolf

Yes but, no but.  Or to put it another way, I’m at sixes and sevens about Mollie Marriott’s new album.
Is it any good?  Yes, it is.  Do I like it?  That’s a different question, but yes, although it’s not really my thang.  What does it sound like?  Er, let’s see how we go with that one, shall we?
Truth Is A Wolf is a very polished, highly professional piece of work.  There’s no doubting the quality of the individual songs and their arrangements, which are very well put together. 
Mollie Marriott raids her jewellery box
Pic by Rob Blackham
The production is glossy, especially the construction of a sound that occasionally contrasts Marriott’s clear-as-a-bell singing with an undercurrent of fuzzed up guitar to good effect, notably on the top notch co-write with Paul Weller ‘King Of Hearts’, on which he also plays.  Keyboards are layered cleverly in places, and there’s even a cello to the fore on the subdued and sensitive ‘Love Your Bones’. 
Mollie Marriott has an exquisite and flexible alto voice - if you’re expecting a female version of her old man Steve’s raucous holler then do not pass go, do not collect two hundred quid.  She may have a bluesy, roots side, as her guest spot with Bad Touch on Tina Turner's 'Baby Get It On' suggests, but it's kept mostly under wraps, and while she displays a soulful vibe on some songs it’s of a very British variety.  Technically though, she makes very good use of a great range and exceptional control.  Credit too, for supplementing her on several songs with backing vocal arrangements that are simply luscious – ‘My Heaven Can Wait’ being a prime example with its dynamic crescendo, rising and falling in waves.
Myself, I’d like a bit more in the way of rough edges, but that’s a matter of personal taste.  Each song is well constructed, and if at first blush they don’t seem to have the strongest hooks, after repeated listens I find myself getting up in the morning with the likes of ‘Control’, or the title track with it's tuneful mock wolf howls, swirling around my head.
Truth Is a Wolf strikes me as the kind of polished British pop-rock that had  its origins in late period Beatles and the production ethos of George Martin, and continued through the post-prog phases of Peter Gabriel and, less adventurously, Genesis.  Or maybe it takes its cue from the kind of mainstream rock that Buckingham-Nicks era Fleetwood Mac nailed so successfully.  Either way, with a female lead vocal in the mix, there are also faint echoes here and there of Kate Bush, as on the opening of ‘Run With The Hounds’, and KT Tunstall and Nerina Pallot also spring to mind.
Marriott doesn’t quite stamp her personality on the album as a whole, despite the fact that she’s often telling some heartfelt and personal stories, such as the reflections on her relationship with her daughter on ‘Broken’.  A stronger emotional connection between the lyrics and the music would really have made me sit up and take notice.  But Truth Is A Wolf is still an impressive down payment on what Mollie Marriott could be capable of.


Truth Is A Wolf is released on 3 November.
Mollie Marriott is touring the UK with Bad Touch throughout November.
'Baby Get It On', by Bad Touch featuring Mollie Marriott, is a free MP3 download available here.

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Listened to lately . . .

Time to catch up on a couple of albums from the last year that slipped by without any Blues Enthused comment, but first of all a new single from a familiar name.

Mollie Marriott – Control/Truth Is A Wolf
Put Steve Marriott out of your mind.  Mollie Marriott isn’t some raucous blues-rock bawler like her dad.  As this single from her forthcoming album Truth Is A Wolf demonstrates, she’s
Mollie Marriott - blonde ambition
Pic by Rob Blackham
much more in Jo Harman territory, vocally and stylistically.  Co-written with Sam Tanner of Brother Strut, ‘Control’ kicks off in the vein of a modern work song, over a steady, throbbing drumbeat, while Marriott’s voice swoops and soars over it.  Gradually the tempo picks up, some impressive backing vocals add depth, and a gritty guitar solo puts icing on the cake.  ‘Truth Is A Wolf’ is a slower, haunting effort with a bluesy edge, on which Marriott demonstrates excellent vocal control as she imitates a wolf-like howl – in an entirely musical fashion, I should make clear.  These two tracks from Ms Marriott represent a promising overture for the album to come.


Truth Is A Wolf is released on 3 November.
Mollie Marriot tours the UK supporting Bad Touch in November and December.

Selwyn Birchwood – Pick Your Poison
Floridian Selwyn Birchwood’s first album Alligator album in 2014, Don’t Call No Ambulance, was a strong calling card, and if anything this follow-up released back in May is even stronger.  ‘Trial By Fire’ kicks off the album with Othar Turner-like fife and drums as an intro to a distinct air of hypnotic North Mississippi hill country, a slitheringly convincing first stop on a tour of blues styles.  Birchwood’s lap steel guitar gets a rollicking workout on ‘Guilty Pleasures’, while they do a nice mash up of funk and a reggae beat on the title track, and ‘Reaping Time’ follows in an old blues tradition - the solemn contemplation of death.
It’s all drawn together by Birchwood’s gravelly voice, and a meaty sound bolstered by the sax playing of Regi Oliver.  Musically the material is both original and mature, and Birchwood also has a knack for a lyric, getting fiery with the political statement of ‘Police State’, and witty on the likes of the gospelly, N’Awlins-tinged ‘Even The Saved Need Saving’.  No two ways about it, Selwyn Birchwood is a rising star.

Fantastic Negrito – The Last Days Of Oakland
I bought Fantastic Negrito’s latest offering last year, but somehow it slipped my mind for ages afterwards.  Which is a shame, because it’s as adventurous an affair as his earlier Fantastic Negrito Deluxe EP, reviewed here back in 2015.  Multi-instrumentalist Negrito allies old blues stylings – going all the way back to the haunting traditional folk song ‘In The Pines’, popularised by Lead Belly among others – to loops and beats to create something that may not be unique, but manages to sound old-fashioned and modern at the same time.

If truth be told he overdoes the work song notion a bit, but there’s still plenty of mileage in the rock steady bass and drums, falsetto vocals and keyboard trills of ‘Working Poor’, the cantering syncopation of ‘Scary Woman’, and the Prince-like juddering staccato of ‘Hump Thru The Winter’.  Reprised from the EP, ‘Lost In A Crowd’ veers from tense stomp to wistful refrain, while ‘Rant Rushmore’ goes the other way with a fragile verse belying bitter, twisted lyrics before crashing into a heavy chorus.  Fantastic Negrito may not have quite cracked the formula yet, but he’s got enough going on to give Gary Clark Jnr a run for the money in the blues-meets-beats stakes.